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Wednesday, May 23, 2018

AZEEZ & ZAHID NEXT TO BE GRILLED BEFORE MACC ARRESTS NAJIB? 1MDB GUESSING GAME BEGINS OVER MP FROM NORTHERN STATE & THE MAN WHO VOUCHED FOR RM2.6BIL SAUDI PRINCE DONOR

PUTRAJAYA – Graft busters are waiting to record statements from one or two key witnesses in the case of SRC International before pressing charges.
Malaysian Anti Corruption Commission chief commissioner Datuk Seri Mohd Shukri Abdull said the case can be wrapped up ”soon”, but declined to give a timeline.
“Today, we are taking a statement from Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak. He is here to have his statement recorded. If need be, we will call him back,” said Shukri.
On the identities of the witnesses, the MACC chief declined to name them but described them as crucial to the investigation.
The MACC has been working closely with authorities in the United States, Britain, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland on this case but Shukri admitted lack of cooperation from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
On the probe by the US Department of Justice, he said its findings were similar to that of MACC’s, but declined to elaborate.
The DoJ has launched a criminal probe and filed civil lawsuits seeking to recover about US$1.7bil in assets said to have been bought with stolen 1MDB funds.
Shukri revealed that a meeting with a “prince” from Saudi Arabia, who had purportedly donated the RM2.6bil to the former prime minister, could not show proof of making the donation.
MACC officers went to Saudi Arabia in 2015 after being “told” to see the prince who made the donation.
“Usually our standard operating procedure is that we look for witnesses ourselves. In this case, we were told who the witness was. So we went to Saudi Arabia and met the prince. He admitted making the donation. When we asked for supporting documents. he could not produce any,” Shukri explained.
He also cleared the notion that the murder of deputy public prosecutor Datuk Anthony Kevin Morais was linked to 1MDB.
“Kevin Morais’ case has nothing to do with 1MDB,” he said in response to allegations by Sarawak Report editor Clare Rewcastle-Brown who said Kevin had leaked information to her about the AG’s Chambers’ investigation into SRC International.
Shukri also hit out at his predecessor Tan Sri Dzulkifli Ahmad, calling him a “traitor” and accused him of protecting those who violated the law.
“He is supposed to make a case stronger, tell us to find more evidence so we can build a solid case. But instead he protected the wrong.
“I cannot work with a traitor, a person who lacks integrity. That was why when former MACC chief (Tan Sri Abu Kassim Mohamed) left and he (Dzulkifli) took over, I decided to go for early retirement because I could not work with him,” he said.
Dzulkifli, who was then with the AG’s Chambers was promoted to the post of MACC chief on Aug 1, 2016. He quit on May 14 and has since returned to the AG’s Chambers.
Asked how damaging is this case to Malaysia, Shukri simply said: “The whole world knows about it’,”
Earlier, the 1MDB task force which met for the first time outlined its focus on the investigations – on asset recovery, to bring back cash and other assets derived from previous activities of 1MDB and also to take action against those involved.
The meeting was held at the MACC headquarters and was attended by its members.
Aside from Shukri they are former Attorney General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail, former MACC chief commissioner Tan Sri Abu Kassim Mohamed and former Special Branch deputy director Datuk Abdul Hamid Bador.

An MP and a royal ‘fix-it man’ on the radar of MACC

PETALING JAYA: An MP from a northern state and the person who opened the doors of a Saudi palace to MACC officers are now on the commission’s radar – thanks to Datuk Seri Mohd Shukri Abdull tell-all about the MDB investment fund.
The guessing game has also started over the identity of the “one or two important witnesses” that MACC is looking out for to get statements in relation to SRC International, the former subsidiary of 1MDB.
“You wait, when we get one or two very important witnesses, you will get the story,” the chief commissioner told the reporters who packed his press conference in Putrajaya yesterday.
In addition, the chief commissioner also alluded to a “northern” MP who visited him twice when he was investigating the 1MDB case.
On the second occasion, Mohd Shukri, who was the Special Operations Division director of MACC at that time, said he had told the MP that he only wanted one thing – that no one interferes with his investigation.
Another person of interest would be the “somebody” who introduced the MACC investigators to the “Saudi Prince” who had allegedly made the RM2.6bil donation to Najib.
“In our SOP (standard operating procedures), we look for witnesses ourselves. But in this case, somebody introduced the prince to us,” said Shukri.
– ANN

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