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MALAYSIA Tanah Tumpah Darahku

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10 APRIL 2024

Friday, April 10, 2020

TILL NOW MUHYIDDIN’S COUP GOVT NOT RECOGNIZED BY U.S. – NAJIB’S STOLEN 1MDB BILLIONS WON’T BE COMING BACK ANYTIME SOON – ESPECIALLY AMID GLOBAL FEARS MUHYIDDIN READY TO LET NAJIB OFF THE HOOK FOR HIS OWN POLITICAL SURVIVAL, TAKING MALAYSIA BACK INTO KLEPTOCRACY MODE

EFFORTS to recover funds allegedly stolen from 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) have hit a snag due to missteps by the previous government that were further complicated by the sudden regime change in late February.
The Straits Times reported that negotiations between the previous Pakatan Harapan (PH) government and the US Department of Justice (DoJ) had ground to a halt due to several disputes even before its collapse.
Quoting sources, the report said relations between the two negotiating parties deteriorated early on when the PH government secretly worked with Indonesian authorities to seize the Equanimity.
The superyacht, owned by the 1MDB scandal’s alleged mastermind Low Taek Jho, was first taken into US custody in Bali with the Indonesian police’s help before Malaysia’s takeover and subsequent sale.
Malaysia had also pulled out of a DoJ-led global settlement initiative with Low, Goldman Sachs and Abu Dhabi’s state-owned International Petroleum Investment Company (IPIC), which guaranteed US$6.5 billion in 1MDB bonds, in the belief that much more can be recovered through court cases.
With a new government in place that is allied with former prime minister Najib Razak, who is facing dozens of abuse of power and graft charges over the 1MDB scandal, foreign governments involved in recovering 1MDB funds including the US are also unsure of how to proceed.
This is compounded by widespread worry in Malaysia that key players of the 1MDB scandal, including Najib, may now get off the hook.
Aside from the US$200 million that the US DoJ had handed over and the US$150 million in proceeds from the Equanimity’s sale, Malaysia seems unlikely to get much of its 1MDB funds back unless it reconsiders the global settlement initiative, the report said.
THE MALAYSIAN INSIGHT

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