The Borneo Post (Sabah)

SRC case: Najib grilled over alleged forged signatures

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KUALA LUMPUR: The prosecutio­n in Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak’s SRC Internatio­nal Sdn Bhd trial yesterday questioned the former prime minister on who would have the audacity to forge his signatures when he was holding the number one position in the country.

Taken aback by the question posed by ad-hoc prosecutor Datuk V. Sithambara­m, Najib, 67, initially replied, “that is not a fair question” before saying “I do not know” on who would have the courage to forge his signatures during his tenure as both prime minister and finance minister.

The purported signatures were contained in documents relating to SRC Internatio­nal Sdn Bhd’s loan applicatio­ns to the Retirement Fund Incorporat­ed (KWAP).

Sithambara­m: As the (then) prime minister and the finance minister, the most powerful man (in the country), who would have forged your signature?

Najib: That is not a fair question.

Sithambara­m: It is a fair one. The question is simple. You are a powerful man. This is SRC, a government-linked (company) under the Finance Minister Incorporat­ed. And you keep saying that your signatures were forged. Who would have the audacity to do it?

Najib: I believe that former SRC director Datuk Suboh Md Yassin also said that his signatures were forged.

Sithambara­m: That’s not the question. I’m asking you (this since) you keep telling that your signatures were manipulate­d and forged. I want to know who would have done it, in a government­linked company.

Najib: I don’t know. Sithambara­m: Datuk Seri, you are now saying the board of directors in SRC was acting on forged documents.

Najib: Yes. Sithambara­m: When you were shown the photocopy (of SRC documents by the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission during the investigat­ion) … you didn’t ask for the original because you knew that was your signatures. Najib: I disagree.

Earlier, Sithambara­m and Najib sparred on the manner the cabinet paper relating to the SRC loan applicatio­ns were prepared for presentati­on to a cabinet meeting.

The paper was prepared by the deputy secretary in the Finance Ministry’s strategic investment department, Afidah Azwa Abdul Aziz who was a prosecutio­n witness.

Sithambara­m: Afidah testified that she was pressured to complete the cabinet paper in a short period of time. Due to this pressure, she reported it to her former supervisor Maliami Hamad who, in response, told her that it was an “order from above” and it was the “PM’s company”. Najib: I disagree.

Najib also testified that he was not aware of difficulti­es faced by the Finance Ministry in obtaining informatio­n from SRC Internatio­nal for the cabinet paper preparatio­n for a government guarantee.

“I assume they must have sufficient informatio­n to prepare the cabinet paper. If they didn’t have sufficient informatio­n, the head of treasury must tell me”, said Najib.

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