August 6, 2012
How many times has the deputy agriculture
minister visited the National Feedlot Centre in the past year to resolve
the NFCorp scandal, asks Tony Pua.
Will MCA Young Professionals Bureau chief Chua Tee Yong be as
relentless and hardworking in collecting back RM250 million of National
Feedlot Corporation soft loan under the purview of his ministry, as his
crusade against the Selangor government over the RM392 million debt
recovery exercise?
I concede that Chua, who is the deputy minister of agriculture and
agro-based industry, has been most exasperating in his crusade against
the Selangor state government over the RM392 million debt recovery
exercise from Talam Corporation Bhd.
Chua has made the serious allegation of the Selangor government under
Pakatan Rakyat bailing out Talam to the tune of RM1 billion.
According to him, the Selangor state has not only “paid” Talam RM392
million, we had help them settle nearly RM300 million in debt in order
to rescue Talam from financial distress. It was because of the Selangor
RM1 billion bailout, Talam was able to regularise its accounts and get
out of its Practice Note 17 (PN17) status on Bursa Malaysia.
It has since been proven beyond doubt that Chua got his facts
completely wrong, and made highly laughable accounting assumptions to
come up with the above allegations.
Instead of a bailout, the Selangor government was able to collect
back from Talam the full amount of RM392 million from Talam in the form
of cash and assets. The RM392 million was legacy debt from the Barisan
Nasional administration since the 1990s which were never properly
accounted for nor were they collected.
In fact, Talam shareholders must be rueing the day Pakatan took over
the Selangor government in 2008 because they had to pay up their debts
within two years, as opposed to under the BN administration which did
not make any serious attempts to collect these debts for more than a
decade.
What is appalling is the fact that Chua continued his tirade against
the Selangor state government, particularly over the valuation of the
assets taken over from Talam with near daily press conferences.
Despite continued embarrassment for getting his facts wrong or
incomplete, he is happily touring Selangor visiting lakes and mountains
to make all sorts of claims over the valuation of these properties.
Chua a property valuer now?
Chua must surely not be so incompetent as not to know that these properties were valued not only by professional certified valuers but also by Jabatan Perkhidmatan dan Penilaian Hartanah (JPPH) (Property Valuation & Services Department), which is under the jurisdiction of the Federal Government’s Ministry of Finance.
Chua must surely not be so incompetent as not to know that these properties were valued not only by professional certified valuers but also by Jabatan Perkhidmatan dan Penilaian Hartanah (JPPH) (Property Valuation & Services Department), which is under the jurisdiction of the Federal Government’s Ministry of Finance.
If both the professional valuers and JPPH were able to arrive at an
agreeable valuation on the pieces of land – regardless of whether
there’s a lake or mountain on it – then who is Chua to give these pieces
of land a different value?
Has Chua decided that he will make a better property valuer than he will as an accountant?
If
Chua spends as much effort as he does visiting all parts of Selangor to
carry out the responsibilities of his ministry, then perhaps the
National Feedlot Corporation (NFCorp) scandal would not have reached the
ugly state it is suffering from today.
Let me ask Chua to state how many times has he visited the National
Feedlot Centre (NFC) in the past year to resolve the NFCorp scandal?
Did he even visit the NFC a single time to perhaps count the number
of cows being bred in the farm instead of making multiple fishing trips
to the scenic Bestari Jaya lakes?
Has Chua delivered his ministerial responsibilities by finding out
why a RM250 million soft loan was extended to NFCorp owned by Umno
Wanita chief Shahrizat Abdul Jalil’s family in 2008, two years before a
project implementation agreement was even signed between his ministry
and NFCorp?
In fact, has Chua ever took the trouble to find out why NFCorp has
not paid a single sen back to the government despite the RM250 million
loan being due for its first repayment installment since January 2012?
Can Chua provide an assurance to all Malaysians that every sen of the
RM250 million will be collected back, whether in the form of cash or
assets just as the Selangor government has managed to successfully
collect back the RM392 million Talam debts?
If not, then perhaps Chua could give Malaysians a reason why he is
fit to be the deputy minister of agriculture other than to be the errand
boy for the Selangor Umno warlord and minister, Noh Omar.
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