The Star Malaysia

Trouble in ‘mangosteen garden’

Unfolding developmen­ts in the Taman Manggis land deal could open a can of worms for the Penang administra­tion.

- Joceline TAn

COFFEE and stale fried rice have been some of the items served in the ongoing saga of issues surroundin­g Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng.

The Chief Minister’s coffee invitation­s to his accuser on the bungalow issue has not been taken up and he has been photograph­ed at least twice drinking coffee on his own in his Komtar office.

His would-be coffee date Datuk Shabudin Yahaya, the Umno MP for Tasik Gelugor, was the one who raised the undervalue­d bungalow issue in Parliament.

The stale fried rice, on the other hand, was aimed at allegation­s that Datuk Abdul Rahman Dahlan made about a plot of land in George Town known as Taman Manggis.

He also slammed the Urban Wellness, Housing and Local Government Minister as the “minister of rumours and slander”.

Actually, the informatio­n and documents provided by Rahman on Taman Manggis were far from stale.

Taman Manggis had been controvers­ial from the very start when the land, originally meant for affordable housing, was sold in 2010 to a company known as KLIDC (Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Dental Centre) for RM11.6mil to develop a hotel and dental centre.

The undervalue­d price is only part of the controvers­y. The land has not been developed until today despite stipulated conditions.

In the meantime, leaked documents suggest that the state government had extended the leasehold on the land to 99 years and approved greater commercial content on the land use.

All these additional “perks” have jacked up the value of the land.

On Tuesday, Rahman produced sale and purchase documents to show that the Taman Manggis land had been resold at a handsome profit of RM59mil on Nov 11, 2015.

The land which was purchased for RM11.6mil had been resold for RM70.6mil. The company is still known as KLIDC but the shareholdi­ng had changed hands.

Lim insisted that KLIDC was still the owner and produced documents from the Commission of Companies Malaysia (CCM). But the CCM company profile was last updated on Aug 27, 2015, several months before the land was resold. He also insisted that the land grant still states KLIDC as the landowner.

Taman Manggis is fast becoming an I-accuse-you and you-accuse-me drama with no end in sight.

Lim has denied any wrongdoing in connection with the sale of the Taman Manggis land.

What his political opponents want are answers from his administra­tion because the sale of state land comes with strict conditions of what the new owner can or cannot do with it.

KLIDC’s change of ownership at a hefty profit also raises a red flag.

“The state government is the trustee of public land. It has to explain what has happened and take corrective action. Moreover, Penang is known for its CAT (competency, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy) policy,” said a Penang lawyer.

The perks or what some see as special allowances accorded to KLIDC in terms of the enhanced land lease and favourable developmen­t land use also needs to be explained.

The Taman Manggis land deal has been described by some as a can of worms with some Internet websites linking it to certain wellconnec­ted businessme­n and property developers in Penang.

The intense interest also has to do with the fact that Datuk Tang Yong Chew, the central figure in KLIDC, happens to be a business partner of Phang Li Koon in two other companies.

Phang is the lady who sold the Jalan Pinhorn bungalow to Lim for RM2.8mil.

Lim’s administra­tion has declassifi­ed documents to rebut claims that the land was meant for affordable housing. The documents showed the Barisan Nasional government had proposed mixed developmen­t comprising government quarters and shop lots.

Lim’s accusers said the land was sold via a form of negotiated tender known as request for proposal but he insisted it was through open tender.

His administra­tion, in turn, accused Perda (Penang Regional Developmen­t Authority) of also selling state land at below market value in Seberang Perai.

Lim’s administra­tion is under tremendous pressure. It is evident that those around him are stumped by the well-researched nature of the attacks.

But they are standing by him even if they are unable to defend him in an adequate way.

The Chinese vernacular media like Sin Chew Daily have devoted one full page, sometimes two pages, of reports daily on the bungalow and Taman Manggis issues.

“Property, land and business – these are issues that our Chinese readers are interested in. When mixed with politics, it becomes even more interestin­g,” said a senior journalist from Sin Chew Daily.

It has been smooth-sailing for Lim since coming to power in Penang but troubled waters lie ahead.

Property, land and business – these are issues that our chinese readers are interested in. When mixed with politics, it becomes even more interestin­g. sin Chew daily journalist

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia