Manila Bulletin

Malaysian ex-PM Najib's first 1MDB trial to proceed

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KUALA LUMPUR (AFP) - Malaysian ex-leader Najib Razak's first trial linked to the 1MDB scandal will proceed after a judge ruled Monday prosecutor­s had made a sufficient case, boosting efforts to bring him to justice over the mammoth fraud.

Vast sums were plundered from sovereign wealth fund 1MDB in a multi-billion-dollar scam allegedly involving former Prime Minister Najib and his cronies, which has triggered investigat­ions around the world.

His coalition was ousted at the polls last year after six decades in power largely due to the scandal, and he has since been arrested and hit with dozens of charges linked to the looting of the investment vehicle.

The 66-year-old went on trial for the first time in April over the controvers­y, in a case centering on the transfer of 42 million ringgit ($10.1 million) from a former 1MDB unit into his bank account. Najib denies any wrongdoing.

Prosecutor­s finished presenting their evidence in August, and on Monday High Court judge Mohamad

Nazlan Mohamad Ghazali ruled the case was strong enough to go forward and Najib should enter his defence.

''The accused had enormous and overarchin­g influence'' over the 1MDB unit, SRC Internatio­nal, the judge told the court, adding the prosecutio­n had establishe­d Najib has a case to answer for all seven charges he is facing.

''It was under the control of the accused from day one. The accused wielded considerab­le power.''

The alternativ­e would have been to strike out the charges in the case -although Najib is still facing several other cases linked to 1MDB, with his biggest trial over the scandal having opened in August.

Najib, who remains free on bail, was in court for the decision and hung his head as the ruling was read out. Such a ruling is usual in Malaysian court cases after prosecutor­s present their evidence.

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