The Borneo Post

KWAP'S RM1.8 bln sent abroad without due diligence – Witness

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LUMPUR: The High Court here was yesterday told that SRC Internatio­nal Sdn Bhd failed to perform due diligence on RM1.8 billion – the first Retirement Fund Incorporat­ed (KWAP) loan – before transferri­ng it offshore for purported investment activities.

SRC Internatio­nal's former director Datuk Shahrol Azral Ibrahim Halmi, 54, said no due diligence was carried out as the directors' circular resolution (DCR) was signed and approved by Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, who was the prime minister and minister of finance at the material time.

Shahrol Azral said this when testifying as a third party in SRC Internatio­nal's US$1.18 billion civil suit against Najib and its former chief executive officer Nik Faisal Ariff Kamil.

“I felt I was under obligation from the instructio­ns of the PM. I would have preferred for informatio­n to be available but I went ahead and signed it. It wasn't only instructio­ns, this was signed by the PM and former finance minister and shareholde­r of 1MDB so that carried a lot of weight.

“We tried to find as much informatio­n as we could but when it came to execution the PM signed off...so we had to do it. The PM thinks its a good idea, I trust his judgments,” said the witness when queried by Najib's counsel Harvinderj­it Singh.

The loan money was

transferre­d to Falcon Private Bank Ltd in Switzerlan­d and Julius Baer in Hong Kong, to be used to acquire two companies in Indonesia (PT ABM Investama and Bumi Resources TBk PT) and two companies in Mongolia (Gobi Coal and Energy Limited and Erdens-Tavan Tolgoi).

In the SRC criminal trial in 2019, former SRC chairman Tan Sri Ismee Ismail testified that Nik Faisal was ordered by Najib to transfer out the money in a meeting on Sept 7, 2011.

SRC, under its new management, filed the suit in May 2021, claiming that Najib had committed a breach of trust and power abuse, personally benefitted from the company's funds and misappropr­iated the said funds.

It is also seeking a court declaratio­n that Najib is responsibl­e for the company's losses due to his breach of duties and trust and for Najib to pay back the RM42 million in losses that they have suffered. Najib, 70, has been serving a jail sentence at the Kajang Prison since Aug 23, 2022, after being convicted of misappropr­iating RM42 million in SRC Internatio­nal funds.

He then filed a petition for a royal pardon on Sept 2, 2022, and the Pardons Board in January this year reduced Najib's jail term from 12 years to six, with the fine cut to RM50 million from RM210 million.

The trial before Judge Datuk Ahmad Fairuz Zainol Abidin continues on May 6.

 ?? — Malay Mail photo ?? Najib is escorted to the court by Prisons officers for the continuati­on of his trial.
— Malay Mail photo Najib is escorted to the court by Prisons officers for the continuati­on of his trial.

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