`


THERE IS NO GOD EXCEPT ALLAH
read:
MALAYSIA Tanah Tumpah Darahku

LOVE MALAYSIA!!!


Sunday, March 13, 2022

We facilitated PDRM request on Zeti’s husband’s probe, say Singapore police

 

Police are investigating Tawfiq Ayman for allegedly receiving 1MDB-linked funds from fugitive businessman Low Taek Jho, or Jho Low.

PETALING JAYA: Singapore police say they have dealt promptly with the requests of their Malaysian counterpart for assistance in the 1MDB-linked probe of Tawfiq Ayman, the husband of former Bank Negara Malaysia governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz.

In an email response to FMT, the Singapore High Commission’s first secretary (public affairs) Syed Arafat Hussain said there had been multiple correspondences between both parties since December last year following the Malaysian police’s request to travel to the republic for the purpose.

He said in the Commercial Affairs Department’s (CAD) latest response, it had proposed for the Malaysian team to conduct its visit between Feb 8 and Feb 9 this year, but the Malaysian side only responded on March 10, requesting to enter the republic in mid to late March.

Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) chief commissioner Azam Baki had earlier said the agency was not investigating Tawfiq, whose company in Singapore is said to have received 1MDB-linked funds from fugitive businessman Low Taek Jho, or Jho Low.

Azam said that MACC was only tasked with repatriating 1MDB funds from Singapore and that the probe into Tawfiq was being handled by the police.

On March 3, Bukit Aman said it was waiting for the green light from their Singapore counterparts to cross the border to continue investigating graft allegations against Tawfiq.

Its Commercial Crime Investigation Department director Kamarudin Md Din told FMT that the surge in Covid-19 cases due to the Omicron variant in Malaysia and Singapore had disrupted the progress of the investigation.

“We will go as soon as they allow us to cross the border,” Kamarudin said.

On March 8, deputy law minister Mas Ermieyati Samsudin told Parliament that police were supposed to continue with the investigation in Singapore but were unable to do so because the border had been closed.

Singapore police were reported to have informed Bank Negara Malaysia of suspicious transactions in 2015 and 2016 involving a company owned by Zeti’s husband and one of her sons. - FMT

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.