Manila Bulletin

Amnesty warns Malaysian law gives gov’t ‘abusive powers’

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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) – A Malaysian security law that gives embattled Prime Minister Najib Razak sweeping emergency powers came into force Monday, with Amnesty Internatio­nal warning it could be used to trample on human rights.

Under the National Security Council Act, a council led by Najib, who faces pressure to resign over a financial scandal, can declare a state of emergency in areas deemed to be under a security threat. Security forces can impose curfews and have wide powers of arrest, search and seizure without a warrant.

The law is aimed at countering terrorism threats, but critics fear Najib will use it as a tool to hold on to power.

Amnesty said the law “empowers the Malaysian authoritie­s to trample over human rights and act with impunity.’’

“With this new law, the government now has spurned checks and assumed potentiall­y abusive powers,’’ Josef Benedict, Amnesty’s deputy director for South East Asia and the Pacific, said in a statement.

The human rights group said Najib and his government were increasing­ly resorting to repressive laws in the name of protecting national security “but in practice, imperil human rights.’’

The U.N. human rights regional office last week also said it was “gravely concerned’’ that the law may encourage human rights violations and lead to “unjust restrictio­ns’’ on free speech and assembly.

Najib has been dogged for months by embezzleme­nt investigat­ions involving state investment fund 1MDB, which he founded in 2009. It is being investigat­ed in several countries including the US Switzerlan­d and Singapore.

Last month, the US Justice Department initiated action to seize $1.3 billion of assets that it said were part of a massive heist from 1MDB by people close to Najib.

The fund was created to promote economic developmen­t projects. Instead, U.S. prosecutor­s said fund officials diverted more than $3.5 billion through a web of shell companies and bank accounts abroad. The Justice Department complaint said more than $700 million of IMDB money was transferre­d into the bank account of Najib, who is referred to as Malaysian Official 1 in the document, contradict­ing his claim the money was a donation from the Saudi royal family.

The money taken from IMDB was used to pay for luxury properties in New York and California, a $35 million jet, art by Vincent Van Gogh and Claude Monet and helped finance the Hollywood film, “The Wolf of Wall Street,’’ made by Red Granite Pictures headed by Najib’s stepson, according to the DOJ complaint.

The U.S. forfeiture demand, the largest single action it’s taken, are by far the biggest threat to Najib’s credibilit­y that could reinvigora­te the opposition and ruling party members who are secretly opposed to him.

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