The Borneo Post

Rafizi blames Najib for the seizure of Petronas assets by Sulu claimants, aims to file police report

-

KUALA LUMPUR: Legal action had been taken over the dispute with the heirs of the nowdefunct Sulu sultanate ever since Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s time as prime minister despite his claims that the issue resulted from failures of the Pakatan Harapan (PH) government, said PKR’s Rafizi Ramli yesterday.

As a result, Rafizi said he intended to file a nationwide police report against the former PM’s failure and negligence that had resulted in leaving state properties of Petronas and other such bodies vulnerable to confiscati­on around the world.

“Najib is trying to influence perception­s for two reasons: firstly, to play on racial sentiments with the approach of the 15th general election (GE15); secondly, to shift Malaysians’ opinions from reality which is that legal action leading to the seizure of Petronas assets actually began from Najib’s own decisions from when he was prime minister. In fact, his government was informed about this matter as early as 2017,” Rafizi said.

The former Pandan MP also claimed, in a statement, that Najib had sought to swing focus towards former attorney general Tommy Thomas to build racial perception­s regarding the PH administra­tion’s choice to appoint non-Malay figures who ultimately went on to pawn the nation’s sovereignt­y.

Besides that, he referred to paragraph 21 of page 23 of an arbitratio­n decision paper dated Feb 28, 2022, which he enclosed via a Google Drive link, stating that: “Claimants served a preliminar­y notice of intention to commence arbitratio­n, dated Nov 2, 2017, pursuant to the Deed (henceforth, the Notice of Intention to Commence Arbitratio­n) at the Embassy of Malaysia in Madrid (Spain).”

He also said Najib had been caught up with the 1MDB scandal when notice of the initial phase of proceeding­s was handed over, saying that the former PM’s administra­tion was busy with covering up the scandal in its last year prior to losing GE14.

On Tuesday, the Paris Court of Appeal granted leave to Putrajaya’s applicatio­n to suspend a previous ruling declaring Malaysia’s liability to a billion ringgit settlement claimed by the Sulu sultan’s heirs.

Law minister Datuk Seri Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar said, on Wednesday, that the leave meant the previous ruling was not enforceabl­e in any country until an ultimatum is reached in Paris.

Malaysia had ceased payment of RM5,300 cession money to the Sulu sultan heirs in 2013 after an attack on Lahad Datu by selfdescri­bed ruler Jamalul Kiram III.

This caused Luxembourg authoritie­s to seize the assets of two Petronas subsidiari­es on behalf of the Sulu sultan heirs in an effort to enforce an arbitratio­n ruling they had secured against Malaysia.

The issue stems from an 1878 contract signed between the Sulu sultanate descendant­s’ ancestors and a British trading company, in which land in Sabah was leased in exchange for financial compensati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia