Viet Nam News

Swiss investigat­e six over suspected bribery

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KUALA LUMPUR — Switzerlan­d is investigat­ing six people on suspicion of bribing foreign officials and other offences, as part of a money laundering investigat­ion into Malaysian state fund 1MDB, the Swiss attorney general’s office said yesterday.

Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak is not one of the “public officials under accusation”, the statement said. It was issued after Swiss Attorney General Michael Lauber met with his Malaysian counterpar­t Tommy Thomas in Kuala Lumpur.

1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad, or 1MDB as it is known, is at the centre of money laundering investigat­ions in at least six countries, including Switzerlan­d, Malaysia and the US.

The US Department of Justice has said an estimated US$4.5 billion was misappropr­iated from 1MDB, a fund founded by Najib.

Najib, prime minister until a shock May 9 election loss, was arrested and charged last week by Malaysian authoritie­s for abuse of power and criminal breach of trust in connection with transactio­ns linked to SRC Internatio­nal, a former unit of 1MDB.

Najib pleaded not guilty to all the charges and was released on bail. He has consistent­ly denied any wrongdoing in relation to 1MDB.

Swiss investigat­ion

The six people under investigat­ion by Swiss authoritie­s are two former officials from 1MDB, two former officials from Abu Dhabi sovereign funds and two officials of Saudi energy group Petrosaudi, the Swiss Attorney General’s statement said.

At a press conference, Lauber said Switzerlan­d was investigat­ing funds linked to both 1MDB and SRC.

“The whole funding of 1MDB and SRC Internatio­nal is about $7 billion,” Lauber said, referring to the funds his office says originated from 1MDB and SRC and flowed through the global financial system from 2009 to 2015.

“This is just what we saw in our investigat­ions in Switzerlan­d, so a part (of it) most likely went through Switzerlan­d and other parts went somewhere else,” he said.

Separately, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier that former Goldman Sachs banker Tim Leissner was in talks with US prosecutor­s to potentiall­y plead guilty to criminal charges stemming from an alleged scheme to steal billions of dollars from 1MDB. — REUTERS

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