Sarawak Report
Following media reports in the United States, Sarawak Report can
confirm that this news site handed over extensive data about 1MDB to a
joint US investigation team back in March.
It means that the development fund and its prime fixer Jho Low, who
holds American citizenship, have been under the scrutiny of US law
enforcers for several months, during which time Low has posed as one of
the country’s most generous philanthropists sitting on numerous boards,
including that of the UN Foundation and National Geographic.
The law enforcement team, which travelled to London to collect the
material, included staff from the Department of Justice’s Kleptocracy
Asset Recovery Department and members of the FBI.
Sarawak Report has also provided similar data to the UK authorities and the Swiss authorities in recent days and weeks.
However, we can confirm we have received no such requests from the
Malaysian authorities, who have chosen instead to incorrectly accuse
Sarawak Report of failing to report the matter to the forces of law and
order.
Much of the documentation received by the US and other jurisdictions
relates to the 1MDB PetroSaudi joint venture set up in 2009 and it was
originally provided by the Swiss national Xavier Justo, who is currently
jailed in Thailand owing to denunciations against him by former
PetroSaudi colleagues involved in the deal.
These individuals, currently themselves walking free, include the
London based PetroSaudi directors Patrick Mahony and Timothy Buckland.
Neither of these men nor Jho Low have attempted to take legal action
against Sarawak Report, despite their accusations of fraudulent
reporting.
Together with Malaysian officials and UMNO media outlets, PetroSaudi
have instead concentrated in recent weeks on their attempts to discredit
Justo and their allegations that Sarawak Report ‘tampered’ with the
evidence and supposedly ‘doctored’ documents.
Despite the complete lack of evidence behind such allegations, the
Malaysian Government has responded by banning Sarawak Report, issuing an
arrest warrant and attempting to place its editor on the Interpol Red
Notice list.
However, these aggressive tactics have started to unravel just as the
Prime Minister has set off on his first international tour since the
1MDB crisis struck his administration.
Yesterday, The Edge newspaper, which also received copies of Justo’s
material and reached the same conclusions as Sarawak Report about the
missing billions of ringgit siphoned out by Jho Low, was yesterday
vindicated by the Malaysian High Court, which ordered the Home Ministry
ban on the newspaper should be lifted.
And Najib Razak now finds himself flying into New York amidst
widespread reports that he is being investigated over PetroSaudi and
also the US$681 million, which Sarawak Report revealed had been paid
into his personal account just before the last election.
Najib’s 1MDB dealings with Goldman Sachs
are also a major target for US investigators, after the US bank set
eyebrows rising over the unusually high rates for money it raised for
their Malaysian client.
And in yet a further development, the New York Times has revealed
that its journalists have tracked down one of the key witnesses hunted
by Malaysia’s Bank Negara to assist in their own investigation into
1MDB’s missing billions.
Jasmine Ai Swan Loo was originally identified by Sarawak Report as
a key player in so-called Project Uganda, the operation orchestrated by
Jho Low to channel money out of 1MDB and through PetroSaudi in order to
buy up Taib Mahmud’s family concern UBG group.
Bank Negara subsequently placed wanted notices to interview her and
her colleague at 1MDB Casey Tan, as well as Jho Low’s key lynch pin at
UBG, 1MDB and SRC International, Nik Ariff Faisal Aziz – however, all
had gone missing from Malaysia.
The New York Times have now tracked down Jasmine to a swanky
apartment right under their noses in East 22nd Street, purchased in 2014
for an impressive $4.5 million.
Working at 1MDB has clearly provided rewards for the inner circle of
now wanted officials, despite the huge losses of public money sustained
by the fund.
Perhaps Najib Razak could assist the remaining 1MDB enquiry by asking
the New York cops to pick Jasmine up, so he can bring her back with him
to face questioning in Malaysia?
[Sarawak Report remains Malaysia’s only banned website,
accused on similar grounds to The Edge of “disseminating false
information”. As the judge pointed out in the case of The Edge, no
examples have been provided by the Home Minister as to which
‘inaccuracies’ they are referring to as the basis for their ban and we
conclude that it is likewise an illegal restriction that has been
imposed on our site. Pending any appeal the restriction should therefore
be lifted immediately in line with the judgement in Malaysia’s own High
Court ruling].
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