Matching Sums Of $170m Left SRC And Arrived In Najib's Account - Late 2011 EXCLUSIVE!
5 Mar 2016
As international investigators circle the affairs of 1MDB Sarawak
Report can reveal a new and excruciating development for Malaysia’s
Prime Minister.
It relates to the unexplained figure of US$170 million, which we have earlier reported was paid by a company owned by the businessman Jho Low into Najib’s AmBank account in late 2011.
Devastatingly, it has now emerged that the very same unusual sum was
paid out during the same period by the company SRC International, a
subsidiary of 1MDB which has already been the focus of charges drawn up
against Najib.
It raises an inevitable question as to whether the two transfers were connected.
Sarawak Report has obtained information that in November 2011 SRC
International, which was managed by Nik Faisal Arif Kamil, a close
associate of Jho Low who is now hiding abroad, paid US$170 into an
overseas account at the Swiss private bank Julius Baer.
Questions that need now to be answered are why was the money sent and where did it go next?
If these answers are not forthcoming there will be inevitable
suspicion that the origin of the money that passed from Jho Low’s BVI
company Blackstone Asia Real Estate Parters into Najib’s KL account was
indeed public money from SRC.
SRC , which was divested from 1MDB to the direct ownership of Najib’s
Finance Ministry in February 2012, has been the subject of relentless
controversy. It was originally set up as a subsidiary of 1MDB and took a
RM4 billion loan from the public pension fund known as KWAP in 2011.
Opposition politicians have persistently demanded to know how this
money has been invested and why the company’s accounts have been
regularly delayed and so lacking in transparency?
When the Prime Minister/Finance Minister finally answered questions
last year on SRC he repeated the claim that most of the money had been
invested in Mongolia. However, Sarawak Report investigated and found that the value of the claimed coal mine investment could only amount to a fraction of the RM4 billion borrowed.
Growing SRC scandal
SRC has meanwhile been the focus of the Malaysian Anti Corruption
Commission investigations into the missing billions from 1MDB, which
have already identified
two sets of payments totalling RM42 million and RM27 million,
transferred within Malaysia from SRC to the Prime Minister’s AmBank
accounts.
These payments were facilitated by Nik Faisal Arif Kamil, according
to the evidence, and Sarawak Report has already provided documents to
show that the Prime Minister had granted Kamil authorisation to manage
these private AmBank accounts on his behalf.
This domestic investigation was sensationally closed last month,
through a single-handed intervention by the new Attorney General, whom
Najib had installed after unconstitutionally sacking his predecessor for
drawing up charges against him relating to these transfers.
The hand-picked Attorney General has now been challenged on the
matter by several legal figures and a growing number of police reports
and law suits have been initiated against him for exceeding his
authority in over-ruling the recommendation of the MACC that charges be
brought.
The MACC has also stood its ground and appealed Apandi’s decision
along with his announcement that the Prime Minister had been “cleared”
of all charges on the basis that there was “no evidence” to show that
money had been misappropriated from 1MDB.
The fact that a new international money trail has emerged, apparently
also linking back to SRC, therefore introduces a new deadly dimension
to the situation for Najib.
He might be able to shut down local investigations (albeit at the
expense of the political turmoil that now besets Malaysia), however
payments of dollars through the global banking system can be traced by
outsiders.
The US and Swiss authorities are known to be working closely together
on these matters and they are in a position to discover exactly where
the money then went to from the Swiss Private bank, which has a branch
in Singapore (where the authorities are also cooperating in the
investigations).
If the sum that left SRC is not the same sum that entered AmBank
account number 694 in KL belonging to the Prime Minister in 2011,
therefore, this is the time for him to show the proof.
Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners (BVI)
Sarawak Report has already detailed the role of this BVI company in
making payments not only to Najib, but to the other major player in
1MDB’s deals with the Abu Dhabi fund Aabar, its Chairman Khadem Al
Qubaisi.
In 2012 KAQ, as he is known, received a staggering half billion
dollars into his personal Luxembourg account at yet another private
bank, Edmond de Rothschild banque privee, paid by Blackstone Asia Real
Estate Partners (BVI).
Plainly named to appear as if it were linked to the major US
Blackstone fund BAREP is framed in the classic mould of a series of
off-shore companies set up by Low to launder money.
It had been incorporated in November 2010 and was liquidated in May 2013, shortly after the Malaysian General Election.
Sarawak Report has already reported
that US$170 million was transferred from this company to the same
AmBank account belonging to the Prime Minister that received US$681
million in March 2013.
Sources close to the investigation into 1MDB have also informed
Sarawak Report that the registered manager of Blackstone was the same Seet Li Lin,
who was a key staffer for Jho Low and who also managed the company Good
Star Limited, which received the initial US$700 million stolen from the
1MDB PetroSaudi join venture.
If, therefore, the US$170 million dollars that was paid into Julius
Baer by SRC International in November 2011 was not then transferred,
directly or indirectly, to Blackstone Asia Real Estate Partners, which
had an account with Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore and then on
into the Prime Minister’s KL account, then this is surely the time for
the Minister of Finance to explain what did happen to this missing
US$170 million?
Growing headcount of banks embroiled in 1MDB scandal
Finally, this development has pulled yet another two major global banking institutions into the 1MDB money laundering scandal.
Julius Baer is the latest of a growing list of Swiss private banks
which have allowed themselves to be utilised by plainly politically
exposed persons to transfer gobsmacking sums of money. Others are BSI,
Coutts Zurich, JP Morgan Suisse and Falcon Bank.
Just last December the bank was fined half a billion dollars by the US authorities for assisting tax evasion by its wealthy clients.
The pivotal role of a number of Singapore branches has also become
glaring in this affair, with the major player Standard Chartered now
also in the frame as the account holder for the plainly bogus Blackstone
Asia Real Estate Partners (BVI).
Add to the above Australia’s ANZ bank, the major shareholders and office holders in AmBank, and the US giant Goldman Sachs.
Najib’s foreign lobbyists are doubtless at work and spending
Malaysia’s money to silence these investigations, but signs are that the
regulators and world media know too much for a cover up.
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