Former Malaysian PM Najib questioned by anti-graft agency

Young journalists club

News ID: 23226
Asia » Asia
Publish Date: 12:16 - 22 May 2018
TEHRAN, May 22 - Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak was interrogated Tuesday over a corruption scandal that could lead to criminal charges against him as the country's new anti-graft chief said investigations into the case were suppressed by intimidation during Najib's rule.

Former Malaysian PM Najib questioned by anti-graft agencyTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - Najib was summoned by Malaysia's Anti-Corruption Commission nearly two weeks after the defeat of his long-ruling coalition in national elections, a loss partly blamed on public anger over alleged graft at the 1MDB state investment fund that Najib set up. U.S. investigators say Najib's associates stole and laundered $4.5 billion from the fund between 2009 and 2014, some of which landed in Najib's bank account.

Swarmed by reporters, Najib looked calm and smiled as he was escorted into the commission's offices. At a news conference, new commission chief Mohamad Shukri Abdull said criminal charges against Najib could come "very soon" but that he won't be arrested Tuesday.

Shukri led investigations in 2015 of suspicious money transfers into Najib's bank account but flew to the U.S. after Malaysia's attorney general, who planned to press charges against Najib, was sacked and Shukri heard rumors he himself would be arrested for an alleged conspiracy to topple the government.

Najib has denied any wrongdoing since the scandal erupted in 2015. As prime minister, he sacked critics in his government and muzzled the media to try to survive the fallout.

"Let the law take its course," Shukri told the news conference. He said evidence for the domestic money trail has been completed but it could take "a long time" to investigate the money trail abroad and talk to witnesses. The findings of Malaysia and U.S. investigations are "almost similar," he said.

The former prime minister and his wife have been barred from leaving the country after the new government reopened an investigation into the scandal. Police have raided his home and other properties linked to him, seizing hundreds of expensive designer handbags and luggage stuffed with cash, jewelry and other valuables.

Najib's questioning at the anti-graft agency was specifically over why 42 million ringgit ($10.6 million) was transferred into his bank account from SRC International, a former unit of 1MDB, using multiple intermediary companies. The money was in addition to about $700 million that U.S. investigators said landed in Najib's bank account.

A new attorney general in 2016 cleared Najib of wrongdoing, saying a particular transfer of $681 million was a political donation from the Saudi royal family and that most of it was returned.

Shukri said following that statement, anti-graft investigators were referred to a "questionable prince" from Saudi Arabia who claimed he donated the money to Najib but couldn't produce any supporting documents.

He related the pressure he faced in 2015, saying he was threatened and witnesses disappeared. He declined to say who issued the threats. Just a day before Abdul Gani Patail was sacked as attorney general by Najib in July 2015, Shukri said they met and Gani asked him if he was ready for charges to be filed against the prime minister.

In an emotional moment, he said he felt guilty for fleeing to the U.S. as his men in the agency were removed or transferred.

New Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has said investigations showed the wrongdoing at 1MDB were more serious than expected.

Source: AP

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