steadyaku47

steadyaku47

Showing posts with label WSJ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WSJ. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 October 2016

Malaysian Fund 1MDB Linked to White House Visit ; Investigators look into whether money embezzled from the fund paid for lobbying seeking closer U.S.-Malaysian relations



The investigation into the corruption scandal rocking Malaysia's 1MDB development fund has reached the White House. WSJ's Bradley Hope has exclusive details on Lunch Break with Tanya Rivero. Photo: Getty
By
Bradley Hope and
Colleen McCain Nelson
 
Updated Oct. 13, 2016 10:23 p.m. ET 
 
93 COMMENTS
 
WASHINGTON—Malaysia’s government-fund scandal, one of the world’s biggest alleged white-collar crimes, has been connected to a Hollywood studio, high-end U.S. real estate—and now, a visit to the White House.

Federal investigators are looking into whether money improperly obtained from the Malaysian fund was paid to a businessman who later arranged an Oval Office visit for relatives of the Malaysian prime minister, according to people familiar with the probe.
The businessman is Frank White Jr., an entrepreneur who helped start an investment firm called DuSable Capital Management LLC, along with partners including a rap star. Mr. White has also raised funds for President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

Investigators believe about $10 million allegedly embezzled from 1Malaysia Development Bhd., known as 1MDB, flowed indirectly to Mr. White in a business deal, said people familiar with the probe.

Additionally, 1MDB paid $69 million to buy a DuSable unit out of a deal they had agreed on to build solar-power plants, the firms said last year.

The investigation of the payments is part of the wider inquiry into 1MDB, a fund that Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak set up in 2009 to spur development. Investigators in several countries believe up to $6 billion was improperly diverted from the fund. Malaysia’s attorney general cleared Mr. Najib of wrongdoing, and 1MDB has denied wrongdoing. Both have pledged to cooperate with investigators.

Mr. White and DuSable have provided information to investigators, said a person familiar with their position. The investigation hasn’t resulted in any allegations of wrongdoing against Mr. White or DuSable.

A spokesman for Mr. White and DuSable said the dealings with 1MDB were “intended to provide renewable energy in Malaysia, create jobs in the United States and earn support for Malaysia in the United States.” At the time, they were aware of no allegations 1MDB was the “victim of theft,” said the spokesman, Erik Smith.

U.S.-Malaysian ties have warmed in recent years, with Mr. Obama in 2014 making the first visit to Malaysia by a U.S. president in over 50 years.
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The U.S. Justice Department has filed a civil complaint seeking to seize more than $1 billion in assets tied to the Malaysian state investment fund 1MDB, which was set up by Prime Minister Najib Razak. Photo: Reuters (Originally published July 2, 2016)
This July, the U.S. Justice Department moved to seize $1 billion of real estate, art and other assets investigators believe were purchased with proceeds from the alleged 1MDB fraud. Civil forfeiture suits filed by the Justice Department are pending.

Mr. White’s Malaysian connections were on display in December 2013 when he escorted to the Oval Office a delegation that included the son and stepson of Malaysia’s prime minister, according to visitor records. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio and director Martin Scorsese accompanied them to present to the president a copy of “The Wolf of Wall Street,” a film the stepson, Riza Aziz, co-produced.

WSJ’s Full Coverage of Malaysia’s Corruption Scandal

The Justice Department said in its July lawsuits the film was partly funded by money stolen from 1MDB, an allegation The Wall Street Journal had reported in April. Mr. Aziz has denied wrongdoing and his production company said it believed the money came from a legitimate partner. Mr. White’s spokesman said he had no dealings with Mr. Aziz.

There is no indication Mr. Obama or the White House were aware of any 1MDB links with Mr. White, or of any issue with the movie’s financing.

Deputy White House press secretary Eric Schultz called Mr. White “a prominent supporter of the president” but stressed that U.S.-Malaysia policy has been driven by what is best for the U.S. and not by outside influences.

Mr. Schultz said Mr. Obama has privately discussed with Mr. Najib “the importance of transparency, accountability, and rooting out corruption” and has raised this issue publicly as well. He wouldn’t comment on Justice Department proceedings.

Mr. DiCaprio declined to comment. Mr. Scorsese didn’t respond to comment requests.
Mr. White in 2007 sold an information-technology company he founded called Advanced Concepts Inc. He raised millions of dollars for Mr. Obama’s 2008 and 2012 campaigns.
Mr. White is listed on Mrs. Clinton’s website as a “Hillblazer” who contributed or raised at least $100,000. He has donated between $1 million and $5 million to the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation, its website says.

A campaign official said Mr. White has hosted events for Mrs. Clinton, but that is the extent of their relationship.

Malaysia’s government has long sought to deepen ties with the U.S., to attract investment and burnish its standing as a moderate Muslim nation.

Jho Low, a Malaysian businessman who U.S. investigators believe played a central role in the alleged 1MDB fraud, helped come up with the solar-power project on which Mr. White’s firm cooperated, said people familiar with the matter. They said Mr. Low told others his efforts in arranging it helped Mr. Najib get closer to Mr. Obama, who golfed with the prime minister in Hawaii at Christmastime in 2014.

Mr. Najib’s office declined to comment on the power project. Mr. Low didn’t respond to comment requests.

Mr. White, whose sister is married to a cousin of First Lady Michelle Obama, knew Mr. Low through friends involved with New York nightclub circles, people familiar with the matter say.
In 2012, Mr. White was paid about $10 million by a company called MB Consulting LLC, owned by an Abu Dhabi business partner of Mr. Low, said people familiar with the payment. It was part of a consulting agreement, said one of the people. The Abu Dhabi partner declined to comment.

Part of the money allegedly embezzled from 1MDB was sent to MB Consulting, U.S. prosecutors stated in their July lawsuits, without saying where it went next.

Hip Hop artist Pras Michel, seen at a Washington event in May, is a co-founder of DuStable Capital Management, a firm that had dealings with the troubled Malaysian state fund 1MDB.
 
In May 2013, Mr. White formed DuSable Capital with Shomik Dutta, a former White House special assistant and 2012 Obama fundraiser, and with Pras Michel, an original member of the hip-hop group the Fugees and the artist behind the hit “Ghetto Supastar (That Is What You are).”

Messrs. Dutta and Michel declined to comment.

Later in 2013, Mr. White registered DuSable, which calls itself an investment firm focused on renewable energy and infrastructure, as a lobbyist for 1MDB. The filing said DuSable would “encourage the U.S. government to provide non-financial support” for a solar project in Malaysia.

On Dec. 18, 2013, Mr. White escorted the Malaysian prime minister’s family members on their Oval Office visit, where they met President Obama.
 
In April 2014, a DuSable unit agreed with 1MDB to jointly develop the solar-power project. The deal was done without a public tender, according to 1MDB board minutes reviewed by the Journal. The minutes say 1MDB executives presented it to the 1MDB board as a “government-to-government” deal between Malaysia and the U.S. Mr. White’s spokesman said the U.S. government wasn’t a party to the deal.

Mr. Obama arrived in Malaysia on April 26, 2014.

Four months later, 1MDB moved to buy the DuSable unit out of the project, which had seen no construction, to prepare 1MDB’s energy assets for a public offering.

Mr. Najib signed a resolution to pay DuSable $95 million for its interest in the solar project. The price was renegotiated and 1MDB paid $69 million, said a 1MDB/DuSable joint statement last year.

Write to Bradley Hope at bradley.hope@wsj.com and Colleen McCain Nelson at colleen.nelson@wsj.com
Posted by STEADYAKU47 at Saturday, October 15, 2016 No comments:
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Labels: 1MDB, White House visit, WSJ

Saturday, 10 September 2016

NAJIB WILL NOT DARE! Dia ni tak ada telok! Lelaki dayus.



The Wall Street Journal warns: "...The risk of communal violence is real, and there are striking parallels to past eruptions. The 1969 riots began after the UMNO-led coalition almost lost a general election as Chinese voters turned to the opposition. Then-Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman supported a protest against insults to Malay leaders, much as Mr. Najib did last year.

Since 1969, racial tensions have risen whenever disunity within the Malay community threatened UMNO’s political dominance. The ruling coalition barely held on to its parliamentary majority in the 2013 election despite losing the popular vote.

The government’s motive to fan Malay nationalism will grow as details of the U.S. lawsuit and international investigations into 1MDB reach the Malay heartland. If Mr. Najib chooses to stoke resentments against ethnic minorities, he may succeed in holding on to power, but at immense cost to Malaysia."
 
1MDB and Malay Nationalism
Najib Razak fans fear of foreign plots and traitors to shore up support, says an editorial in The Wall Street Journal.
wsj.com
 
 
steadyaku47 comment :  I beg to differ from what WSJ is saying as in the above editorial extract. For sure this irresponsible Najib Razak led government is trying to fan racial sentiments and Malay Nationalism to serve his personal agenda and that of Umno but this is not the Malaysia of 1969 when racial sentiments could be whipped up by an Umno stalwart at the drop of a hat! This is not the same Malaysia of 1969 where Umno's hold over the Malays was total and the Malays and Umno were one. 
 
Today we have social media. Today Malaysians are informed and knowledgeable of the money politics, the corruption and the abuse of political power by the criminal political elites  for personal financial gain in all its detail. Today we know about 1MDB, about that RM2.6 billion donation, about Altantuya...and just about every abuse, misuse and use of political power by these criminal elites for their personal advantage. 
 
Malaysian are divided. The Malays are divided. Umno is divided! 
 
Can you see Najib Razak exhorting the Malays to take arms to defend Bangsa, Ugama dan Negara against the others? Can you see anybody in Umno able to do this? And if they did try who will respond? The Red Shirts? The Mat Rempits? The Malays in the Kampongs? Huh...not all the money Umno can pay them will make them want to lay their life down for Umno or Najib! That bloody berani mati idiot, Nazri Aziz , will be the first one to turn and run...for even he knows that once he is dead, he can no longer enjoy the corrupt spoils of political office that he has amassed.
 
No way! 
 
The Rakyat will not be moved in numbers large enough to make another May 13th possible in the times that we live in today. Perish that thought. ...if anything another May 13th might be the trigger to oust Najib Razak and the Flying Hippo. Another May 13th would be an opportunity for the Rakyat to follow through on what Reformasi and Bersih have already started. 
 
And more to the point....NAJIB WILL NOT DARE! Dia ni tak ada telok! Lelaki dayus!   
 
The Flying Hippo? Maybe in a wrestling match she can sit on her opponents and score a technical win...but this is not a wrestling match. This is real life. Malaysians do not want a May 13th and there are enough of us around to make sure it does not happen....just as there are enough of us to vote them out at the next general election!    
Posted by STEADYAKU47 at Saturday, September 10, 2016 No comments:
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Labels: Najib, Rosmah, WSJ

Tuesday, 7 June 2016

Mustapha Kamil : “There are specific instructions to use this or that story, and we’re not allowed to question,”


The Wall Street Journal

Mustapha Kamil, the former group editor of Malaysia’s English-language New Straits Times.                                                     
 
Mustapha Kamil, the former group editor of Malaysia’s English-language New Straits Times. Photo: Mustapha Kamil
By
Tom Wright
Updated June 6, 2016 5:29 a.m. ET
 

A senior Malaysian journalist who quit his job at a leading newspaper said Prime Minister Najib Razak’s government has cracked down on freedom of speech as it tries to limit the fallout from a graft scandal surrounding a state investment fund.

Mustapha Kamil, the former group editor of the English-language New Straits Times, which is controlled by Mr. Najib’s ruling party, took a rare public stance by saying that an increasingly “authoritarian” stand by the government toward media was the reason he quit the newspaper in April. He had worked there for more than a quarter-century.

Mr. Mustapha initially remained quiet after stepping down, but last week posted the reasons for his action on his Facebook page—an unusual act in the closed world of Malaysian state media.

A journalist’s responsibility is “first to the truth,” Mr. Mustapha wrote.

Investigators in at least seven countries are probing 1Malaysia Development Bhd., or 1MDB, a government investment fund Mr. Najib set up in 2009 to boost growth. Some investigators have said they believe $6 billion has gone missing.

Hundreds of millions of dollars originating from 1MDB allegedly moved into Mr. Najib’s private accounts via a web of offshore entities, and was spent on politics, jewelry and clothes, The Wall Street Journal has reported, citing investigators and bank-transfer documents.

Mr. Najib’s government has banned newspapers it controls—which include the New Straits Times and the larger-circulation Malay-language Berita Harian and Utusan Malaysia newspapers—from covering the 1MDB story, Mr. Mustapha said in an interview.

Related Coverage

  • Special Coverage: The Malaysia Controversy
  • Malaysia’s Probe Into 1MDB Fund Was Flawed
  • Najib’s Stepson Allegedly Funded U.S. Property Deals With 1MDB Money
  • Malaysia’s Najib Razak Gains Momentum After State Election Win
  • Najib Confidant Had Central Role at Troubled 1MDB Fund
  • Saudi Foreign Minister Says He Was Aware of Donation to Malaysia’s Najib
  • The Secret Money Behind ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’
News releases from 1MDB denying stories in the Journal and calling into question its sources would sometimes come to the New Straits Times from the prime minister’s office with orders to run the statements in their entirety, according to Mr. Mustapha. The newspaper did as they were told. 

“There are specific instructions to use this or that story, and we’re not allowed to question,” he said. “Before 1MDB, there was more freedom for us to do our job.”

Mr. Najib and the 1MDB fund didn’t respond to questions about whether the government pressured media over coverage of the scandal. In the past, Malaysia’s government has justified curbing media freedom to report on 1MDB, citing the need to maintain public order.
The prime minister has said the money he received in his account was a political donation from Saudi Arabia, and most of it was returned. 1MDB has denied wrongdoing and says it is cooperating with the probes.

Mr. Mustapha acknowledged that the New Straits Times, which is controlled by Media Prima Bhd., a company owned by Mr. Najib’s ruling United Malays National Organization, always faced some curbs on free expression.

Those limits, though, have narrowed considerably in the past year since Mr. Najib began to fight allegations about taking money from 1MDB, he added.

“It was not this frequent and not this authoritarian,” Mr. Mustapha said of previous media controls.

James Chin, a Malaysian academic who heads the Asia Institute at the University of Tasmania, disagrees that the level of pressure on state-run media from the government has increased under Mr. Najib. He said the government of former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad regularly closed newspapers.

But the 1MDB scandal has rolled on for so long—hurting the ruling party’s image—that it is starting to cause fissures between Mr. Najib and editors from newspapers that should support him, Mr. Chin said.

Some independent news outlets, like the Edge Media Group, have also faced pressure from Mr. Najib’s administration after reporting critically about the 1MDB scandal. Last year, the government said it suspended The Edge Weekly and The Edge Financial Daily for two months due to the company’s reporting on the scandal. The Malaysian Insider, another online news site owned by the Edge group, said it was blocked by the government in March and decided to shut down amid falling advertising revenue.

Mr. Najib’s administration has cracked down on criticism of 1MDB in other ways. Last year, a former ruling-party politician was arrested on charges of economic sabotage after he called for an investigation into 1MDB. He was later released on bail.

Mr. Mustapha said on Facebook that the Pulitzer Prize committee’s decision in April to cite The Wall Street Journal as a finalist in international reporting for its coverage of 1MDB was a factor in his decision.

“When an American newspaper…wrote a story that got nominated for the coveted Pulitzer Prize, about an issue that happened right under my nose, I began to seriously search my conscience and asked myself why I was in journalism in the first place,” he said. 

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com
Posted by STEADYAKU47 at Tuesday, June 07, 2016 No comments:
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Labels: 1MDB, Mustapha Kamil, Najib, New Straits Time, WSJ

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

WSJ : "$681 million in Najib's personal account originated with 1MDB".

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


1MDB Scandal: Deposits in Malaysian Leader Najib’s Accounts Said to Top $1 Billion

Global investigators believe much of it originated with state development fund and moved to Prime Minister Najib Razak’s accounts via offshore entities

Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak, left, set up a state fund known as 1MDB several years ago to spur economic growth. The fund is now the subject of investigations.Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak, left, set up a state fund known as 1MDB several years ago to spur economic growth. The fund is now the subject of investigations. Photo: Olivia Harris/

 By Bradley Hope and Tom Wright
Updated March 1, 2016 4:26 a.m. ET 
 
Deposits into personal accounts of Malaysia’s prime minister totaled more than $1 billion—hundreds of millions more than previously identified—and global investigators believe much of it originated with a Malaysian state fund, people familiar with the matter say.
The investigators’ belief contradicts a conclusion reached recently by Malaysia’s attorney general.

The attorney general said $681 million deposited to Prime Minister Najib Razak’s account—identified by The Wall Street Journal last year—was a legal donation from a member of Saudi Arabia’s royal family, and most was returned. The attorney general said there was nothing improper and it was time to stop scrutinizing the deposits, a notion echoed by Mr. Najib.

Malaysia’s 1MDB Decoded

ENLARGE

Related

  • Special Coverage: Malaysia Corruption Scandal, 1MDB & Najib Razak Latest News
  • Former Malaysia Leader Mahathir Mohamad Resigns From Ruling Party
  • Malaysia Leader Najib Razak Lashes Out Against His Critics in Party and Media (Feb. 28)
  • Malaysia Panel Advises Continuing Probe of Money Transfers Into Najib’s Accounts (Feb. 24)
  • Swiss Prosecutors Investigating 1MDB Say Malaysia Funds Were Diverted (Jan. 30)
  • Doubts Raised About Claim of Saudi ‘Donation’ to Malaysia Prime Minister Najib Razak (Jan. 26)
  • 1MDB and the Money Network of Malaysian Politics (Dec. 28)
Investigators in two other countries, while agreeing most of the $681 million ultimately was returned, believe the money originated with a Malaysian state development fund called 1MDB that the prime minister founded, according to people familiar with the probes.
The investigators believe the money moved through a complex web of transactions in several countries and with the help of two former officials of Abu Dhabi, a Persian Gulf emirate with which 1MDB has deep ties.

The investigators are focusing on an entity they believe was a crucial conduit: a firm with a name almost identical to that of a state-owned Abu Dhabi company called Aabar Investments PJS.

In filings, the 1MDB fund has reported paying more than a billion dollars to Aabar—not specifying a full name. Rather than going to the state-owned Abu Dhabi company, investigators believe the money flowed to the similarly named firm, which was registered in the British Virgin Islands, and $681 million made its way circuitously from there to Mr. Najib’s account.

Prime Minister Najib set up 1MDB—short for 1Malaysia Development Bhd.—several years ago to spur economic growth. He heads its board of advisers and often has been involved in its decision making, according to board minutes from several years.

The fund became the subject of investigations about a year ago after it ran up $11 billion of debt. Probes began not just in Malaysia but eventually also in the U.S., Switzerland, Singapore, Hong Kong and, said people familiar with the matter, in Abu Dhabi too.

The Journal reported last year that some of the fund’s money went for projects that helped Mr. Najib’s party retain power in a close 2013 election. Mr. Najib dismissed this description as a claim by political foes, and 1MDB denied playing a role in politics.

In a rare public comment about an active investigation, the Swiss attorney general said in January he suspected that $4 billion had been misappropriated from 1MDB through “complex financial structures.” The 1MDB fund said it hadn’t been contacted by any foreign investigators but stood ready to cooperate.

Mr. Najib has denied wrongdoing or taking any money for personal gain.

His office declined to comment on the assertion the money deposited in his accounts exceeded $1 billion. Most money beyond the previously identified $681 million arrived in 2011 and 2012, said two people familiar with flows into his accounts and a person familiar with one overseas probe. The $681 million arrived in 2013.

Mr. Najib’s office also wouldn’t comment on overseas investigators’ belief that the $681 million originated with 1MDB. That description of its origin is based on bank transfer and loan documents, on interviews with people familiar with the probes in two countries, and on interviews with one of the people familiar with the flows into Mr. Najib’s accounts.

The 1MDB fund declined to comment for this article. After publication of the story, 1MDB, in a statement, didn’t respond to the Journal’s report that investigators believe the fund transferred money to a firm with a similar name to Aabar. 1MDB repeated its statement from Feb. 19 that it “has not paid any funds to the personal accounts of the prime minister.”
The fund pointed out that the attorney general said the deposits came from Saudi Arabia. “Despite this, The Wall Street Journal continues to repeat the same disproven allegations,” the statement said.

The newspaper’s reliance on anonymous sources, “who may or may not exist, betrays a lack of basic journalistic standards on the part of The Wall Street Journal and the fact that the publication has lost all semblance of balanced reporting,” the 1MDB fund’s statement said.

A spokeswoman for Dow Jones, which owns the Journal, said, “We continue to stand behind our fair and accurate reporting of this evolving story.”

Malaysia’s attorney general, Mohamed Apandi Ali, didn’t respond to requests for comment.

ENLARGE
Mr. Najib unveiled 1MDB during a 2009 visit to Abu Dhabi. Aabar Investments PJS, the state company there, later pledged to help 1MDB acquire power plants and build a finance center in Kuala Lumpur.

Little of that investment flowed, according to financial statements of Aabar’s parent company, International Petroleum Investment Co., or IPIC, which is an Abu Dhabi sovereign-wealth fund. IPIC guaranteed billions of dollars of 1MDB bonds, though.
The Journal in December reported the transfer of some money from 1MDB into the firm with a name similar to Aabar’s. The 1MDB fund then said it stood by its financial reports, which show payments to Aabar.


The fund’s website and financial filings said it paid $1.4 billion to Aabar—without specifying a full name—as a cash deposit in 2012. The fund also paid nearly $1 billion in 2014 to extinguish options given to IPIC for guaranteeing bonds, according to a draft report by Malaysia’s auditor general.

IPIC has denied to 1MDB that either IPIC or Aabar ever received this nearly $2.4 billion, said people familiar with the matter.

The whole amount moved to the similarly named British Virgin Islands firm, according to the person familiar with flows into Mr. Najib’s accounts. This is also the belief of overseas investigators, said the people familiar with the probes.

From there, $681 million moved indirectly to another British Virgin Islands firm, this one called Tanore Finance Corp., investigators believe.

And they believe this money then moved on to Mr. Najib’s account—transferred out of an account that Tanore held in Singapore with a Swiss private bank called Falcon Bank.
The investigators believe that sometime later, most of the $681 million was sent back into the web of offshore entities through which it had arrived.

The firm with a name similar to Aabar’s was set up in 2012, global investigators believe, by Aabar’s chief executive at the time, Mohammed Badawy Al Husseiny, and by Khadem Al Qubaisi, then managing director of IPIC and chairman of Aabar.

This similarly named firm was called Aabar Investments PJS Ltd.; the established Abu Dhabi company’s name has no “Ltd.”

Abu Dhabi’s president removed Mr. Al Qubaisi last year. Soon after, IPIC’s new management removed Mr. Al Husseiny. In both cases, no reason was given.
A representative for Mr. Al Qubaisi declined to comment. Mr. Al Husseiny and his lawyer didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Spokesmen for IPIC, Aabar and Abu Dhabi all declined to comment, as did Falcon Bank in Switzerland. Falcon is owned by Aabar, the Abu Dhabi firm.

The two British Virgin Islands firms—Tanore and the one with a name similar to Aabar—have shut down.

As for the Malaysian attorney general’s conclusion that the $681 million deposited to Mr. Najib’s account was a Saudi royal-family donation, the international investigators have found no evidence any of this came from Saudi Arabia, according to those familiar with their probes.

A person familiar with 1MDB’s dealings also said the deposit didn’t come from Saudi Arabia. A Saudi official said in January the kingdom’s ministries of finance and foreign affairs had no knowledge of such a donation to Mr. Najib.

Write to Bradley Hope at bradley.hope@wsj.com and Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com
Posted by STEADYAKU47 at Tuesday, March 01, 2016 No comments:
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Labels: 1MDB, Najib, WSJ

Saturday, 27 February 2016

The Wall Street Journal : Malaysia Corruption Scandal, 1MDB & Najib Razak Latest News



Malaysia Controversy

Nearly $700 million has ended up in the bank account of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, and more than $2 billion is missing. The scandal involving Malaysian government investment fund 1MDB has caused a political crisis in an important U.S. ally in Asia and threatens to upend years of one-party rule in the country.

  • Feb. 24, 2016

    Malaysia Panel: Probe of Money Transfers Into Najib’s Accounts Should Continue

    A regulatory body advised an antigraft agency to push ahead with a probe into transfers of millions of dollars into Prime Minister Najib Razak’s bank accounts.

  • Feb. 25, 2016 Goldman Banker Who Had Ties to 1MDB Departs

    A senior Goldman Sachs banker who helped the Wall Street firm win business with embattled Malaysian state investment fund 1MDB has formally left the bank.

  • Feb. 23, 2016 1MDB Probe Faces Delay in Malaysia

    As foreign investigations into 1MDB gather pace, efforts at home to probe alleged corruption at the troubled state investment fund are facing roadblocks.

  • Feb. 18, 2016 Malaysia’s Central Bank to Lose Chief as It Leads 1MDB Charge

    Malaysia’s central bank governor’s confirmation that she will step down in April when her term expires is likely to further hamper efforts in Malaysia to investigate a corruption scandal involving a state investment fund, analysts say.
  • Feb. 1, 2016 Singapore Authorities Seize Accounts, Investigate 1MDB

    Singapore said it is has seized a large number of bank accounts as part of its investigations into alleged money laundering and other offenses related to a Malaysian state investment fund.

  • Jan. 30, 2016 Swiss Prosecutors Say Malaysia Funds Were Diverted

    Switzerland’s top prosecutor said $4 billion may have been misappropriated from state-owned companies in Malaysia, a significant escalation of an investigation into transactions around government fund 1MDB.

  • Jan. 30, 2016 The Companies Switzerland Says Are Linked to Malaysia’s 1MDB Scandal

    Here’s what we know so far about the companies in Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi that the Swiss attorney general’s office named as part of its investigation into the troubled state-investment fund 1MDB.

  • Jan. 27, 2016 Malaysia Antigraft Agency Seeks Review of Decision to Clear Najib

    Malaysia’s antigraft agency wants a review of the attorney general’s decision to clear Prime Minister Najib Razak of wrongdoing related to a nearly $700 million transfer to his private bank account.
  • Jan. 27, 2016 Goldman Banker With Ties to Malaysia’s 1MDB Goes on Leave

    Goldman Sachs’s Tim Leissner, the banker that helped the Wall Street firm win business with embattled Malaysian government investment fund 1MDB, has taken personal leave from the bank.

  • Jan. 27, 2016 Doubts Raised About Claim of Saudi ‘Donation’ to Malaysia Leader

    Malaysia’s attorney general, trying to end a monthslong scandal, said a nearly $700 million transfer to Prime Minister Najib Razak’s private bank account was a legal “personal donation” from Saudi Arabia’s royal family.

  • Jan. 26, 2016 Malaysia Says Saudis Gave Prime Minister a $681 Million ‘Donation’

    Malaysia’s attorney general ended a probe into the $681 million transferred into Najib Razak’s personal bank account, saying the prime minister didn’t commit a crime, but the decision is unlikely to quell doubts.
  • Jan. 6, 2016 Confusion Over Valuation Casts Doubt on 1MDB Restructuring Plan

    After Malaysia’s prime minister Najib Razak expressed confidence in a debt-repayment strategy for the troubled state investment fund, critics have said it won’t work.

  • Dec. 31, 2015 1MDB Sells Majority Stake in Real-Estate Project for $1.7 Billion

    1Malaysia Development agreed to sell a majority stake in Bandar Malaysia, a real-estate project in Kuala Lumpur, to a consortium that includes a state-owned Chinese company, for about $1.7 billion.

  • Dec. 29, 2015 The Money Network of Malaysian Politics

    The ruling United Malays National Organization party spent hundreds of millions of dollars, much of it from the 1MDB wealth fund, to ensure victory in 2013.

  • Dec. 29, 2015 FBI Eyes ‘Wolf of Wall Street’ Ties to Malaysian Fund at Center of Corruption Probe

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation is looking at assets owned by the family of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, including a film company set up by his stepson that produced "The Wolf of Wall Street,."

  • Dec. 17, 2015 1MDB Sent $850 Million to Entity Set Up to Appear Owned by Abu Dhabi Wealth Fund

    The transfer deepens the mystery over the 1MDB state-investment fund, which is under investigation in at least six countries.
  • Dec. 8, 2015 Chinese Railway Builder, Malaysian Tycoon Join in Bid for 1MDB Land

    A Chinese railroad builder and a Malaysian property tycoon have teamed up on a bid for a stake in some Kuala Lumpur land that controversial Malaysian government investment fund 1MDB is selling to reduce debt.

  • Dec. 3, 2015 Malaysia Passes Security Law

    Malaysia’s government pushed a sweeping new security bill through Parliament in face of growing criticism from opposition politicians and human-rights activists that the country is sliding toward becoming a more authoritarian state.
  • Dec. 3, 2015 Swiss Probe of Malaysia’s 1MDB Puts Falcon Bank in Spotlight

    An investigation into dealings by a Malaysian government development fund is bringing unwanted attention to a number of Swiss banks, including a small wealth manager snapped up by an Abu Dhabi investor during the financial crisis.

  • Nov. 25, 2015 After 1MDB Deal, China’s Clout Set to Grow in Malaysia

    China’s $2.3 billion deal to buy power assets from a debt-ridden Malaysian government-investment fund could give Beijing greater sway in the Southeast Asia nation.

  • Nov. 23, 2015 1MDB to Sell Energy Assets to Chinese Firm

    A Malaysian government-investment fund sealed a $2.3 billion deal to sell its energy assets to a Chinese state-owned firm.

  • Nov. 22, 2015 Malaysia's 1MDB Decoded: How Millions Went Missing

    A Malaysian government investment fund is embroiled in a corruption scandal that is roiling an important U.S. ally. Government investigators say nearly $700 million was deposited into Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak’s bank account. More money is believed missing. The fund, 1Malaysia Development Bhd., is under investigation in at least five countries. Mr. Najib and 1MDB have denied wrongdoing and say they are cooperating with investigators.

  • Nov. 22, 2015 Obama Emphasizes Transparency to Malaysia’s Najib

    President Barack Obama said he spoke to Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak about the importance of transparency and rooting out corruption in government during a private conversation.

  • Nov. 20, 2015 Obama Faces a Diplomatic Dilemma on Malaysia Trip

    When President Barack Obama arrives in Malaysia on Friday, he will face a diplomatic dilemma: How should he handle an important regional partner—Malaysia—whose leader, Najib Razak, is engulfed in scandal?

  • Nov. 19, 2015 Critics of Malaysian Government Cite Censorship Pressure

    Journalists and opposition figures say they are under pressure to rein in criticism of Prime Minister Najib Razak as a scandal involving the troubled 1MDB development fund dents his popularity.

  • Nov. 12, 2015 Malaysian Fund’s Latest Act: Two Obama Fundraisers, One Fugee and $69 Million

    The sprawling web of investments by a Malaysian government fund at the center of a corruption probe now includes two former fundraisers for President Barack Obama and a hip-hop superstar.

  • Nov. 4, 2015 Malaysia’s Najib: ‘We Will Get Answers’ on 1MDB

    Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak acknowledged concerns over governance at state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd., telling a local newspaper in written replies to questions that “we will get answers.”
  • Nov. 3, 2015 Hunt for Billions Invested by 1MDB Points to Australia

    An Australian firm that is currently being liquidated by regulators also played a key role in managing $2.32 billion for state-owned fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd.

  • Nov. 3, 2015 Decoding One of 1MDB’s Most Controversial Investments

    The first major investment by the Malaysian development fund at the center of a political scandal started simply enough but got complex fast.

  • Oct. 23, 2015 1MDB: Political Intrigue, Billions Missing and International Scrutiny

    Malaysian development fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd., or 1MDB, is under investigation in five countries. Here’s what you need to know about the story.

  • Oct. 22, 2015 Malaysia’s Prime Minister Faces No-Confidence Motion

    Opposition in parliament files the first formal challenge to Najib Razak’s rule amid the 1MDB scandal, though it is seen as unlikely to succeed.

  • Oct. 16, 2015 Malaysia’s Prime Minister at Center of 1MDB Storm

    Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak played a key role at state development fund 1MDB, his signature initiative, which has sparked a raft of investigations. The fund has faced accusations that billions of dollars are missing and that money was misused for political purposes or siphoned off.
  • Oct. 14, 2015 U.S. Examines Goldman Sachs Role in 1MDB Transactions

    The FBI and Justice Department are gathering information about Goldman Sachs’s role in a series of transactions at 1Malaysia Development.

  • Oct. 12, 2015 Malaysian Leader Najib Razak Faces Political Test

    Pressure is building on Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak ahead of a no-confidence vote next week amid probes into the troubled state investment fund he heads.
  • Oct. 9, 2015 Malaysian Officials Sought Criminal 1MDB Proceedings

    Malaysia’s central bank said it recommended criminal proceedings against state investment fund 1Malaysia Development for allegedly breaking foreign-exchange rules but that the attorney general had declined to act.

  • Oct. 9, 2015 Malaysia Arrests Another Critic of Prime Minister

    A prominent lawyer was arrested on charges of sabotage after planning to travel to the U.S. to help urge authorities there to investigate money transfers into Prime Minister Najib Razak’s alleged personal accounts.

  • Sept. 22, 2015 Malaysia Leader Najib Razak’s Assets Probed by U.S.

    U.S. investigators are looking into Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak’s assets as part of a series of global probes linked to a troubled state investment fund.
  • Sept. 18, 2015 Malaysia Fund’s Missing Money Problem Grows

    Questions about a troubled Malaysian state investment fund and missing money in the Middle East have widened to include as much as $1 billion more.
  • Sept. 15, 2015 Malaysia to Allow Swiss to Question Witnesses in 1MDB Probe

    Malaysia will allow Swiss authorities to question witnesses in a probe of state investment fund 1Malaysia Development, amid corruption allegations involving Prime Minister Najib Razak.
  • Sept. 9, 2015 Malaysia’s 1MDB Fund Scandal Spreads to U.A.E.

    Officials at a United Arab Emirates state investment vehicle are raising questions about a payment of $1.4 billion from 1MDB that they said they never received.
  • July 9, 2015 Malaysian Financier Jho Low Tied to 1MDB Inquiry

    Correspondence between Singapore police and Malaysia’s central bank focuses on $529 million in deposits.
  • July 2, 2015 Investigators Believe Funds Flowed to Malaysian Leader’s Accounts

    Malaysian investigators scrutinizing a government investment fund have traced nearly $700 million of deposits into what they believe are the personal bank accounts of Prime Minister Najib Razak.
  • June 19, 2015 Web of Entities Spent Ahead of Malaysia’s Tight Election

    Troubled state investment fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd., or 1MDB, and a local charity were among the organizations spending cash in the battleground state of Penang ahead of a close national election in May 2013.

  • June 19, 2015 Malaysia’s Leader Threatened by Fund Controversy

    Big debts run up by a state economic development fund and its alleged role in politics have roiled Malaysia’s markets and led to calls for the prime minister to step aside.
  • March 18, 2015 Malaysia Fund Feud Rattles Government

    A clash between a former Malaysian leader, Mahathir Mohamad, and the current one, Najib Razak, over alleged mismanagement of the country’s troubled multi-billion-dollar national investment fund is destabilizing the government

  • Feb. 1, 2015 1MDB Delays Loan Payment Again

    Malaysian state-owned investment firm 1Malaysia Development Bhd. missed another deadline to repay a $550 million loan over the weekend, although people familiar with the matter say it is edging closer to sealing a financing arrangement with local tycoon Ananda Krishnan to help pay off the debt.
  • April 30, 2013 Goldman's Malaysia Bet Pays Off

    Malaysia is one of the most lucrative places in the world for Goldman Sachs, which made profits of more than $200 million from four government-tied bond deals there in the past two years.
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