So once more wit' feeling, the DJ BUMMer resident in Cambodia offers us the "dessert" for lunch today, quoting the good doctor around the Opposition house:~~~TIGA blue coffee lagi, please! -- YL, Desi
1MDB Buck passes on to Malaysian Taxpayers
15
May 5, 2016
MALAYSIA: Irresponsible Prime Minister Najib Razak passes 1MDB Buck to Malaysian Taxpayers
by Dr. Mahathir Mohamad
1MDB is not a wealth fund as it is touted
to be. Except for the one million Ringgit contributed by the
Government, the rest of the RM 42,000,000,000 (forty-two thousand
million) is borrowed money. Borrowed money cannot be regarded or
classified a wealth. It is a liability which imposes on 1MDB or in case
of its failure the Government to repay the interest and the principal.
The sum is so huge that if the Government cannot pay them it could be
bankrupted. This has happened to Greece.
The possibility of this happening imposes
a heavy responsibility on the management of 1MDB and oversight by the
Government. And very quickly it became clear that the executives and
Board of 1MDB did not take their responsibilities seriously.
Shahrol, the CEO of 1MDB, borrowed five
billion Ringgit from the banks without the knowledge and approval of the
Board of Directors. The borrowings were at high interest rates. In one
case Goldman Sachs was paid a 10% commission for raising a loan with a
5.9% interest. This means that 1MDB gets only 90% of the loan but has to
pay interest on 100%. It is the same with the principal.
The Former CEO of 1MDB– The Probable Scapegoat
The money was apparently used to buy
power plants at well over the market price. The licences for some of the
plants were due to expire. If the purchases were delayed until the
expiration of the licences the prices would be for less than market
price. But the management seemed not to care about getting the best
prices. As a result when the plants were sold to the Chinese, 1MDB
suffered a loss of more than one billion Ringgit. This is the 1MDB style
of doing business.
There are two other cases where the CEO
Shahrol had acted without the approval of the Directors of 1MDB. He
entered into a joint venture (JV) with Petro Saudi before a proper and
intensive due diligence was carried out. Then he invested USD 1 billion
in the JV also without approval of the Board.
The investment was so big that it demands
for thorough and extensive due diligence before it could request for
approval by the Board of Directors. The CEO really has no authority to
invest such a huge amount. But this was what he did.
It is unthinkable that on three occasions
the CEO, Shahrol, would act without following the rules of the company.
In the memorandum of the company Section 117 states that all the
affairs of the company must be approved by the Advisor of 1MDB, i.e. by
Dato’ Seri Najib, the Prime Minister and Minister of Finance.
While Shahrol may be brave enough to act
without the Board’s approval, it is unthinkable that he would act
without Najib’s approval. The responsibility for the three actions by
Shahrol must have been made after, or on the instruction of Najib, the
company’s Advisor. If not he would have been scolded and probably sacked
by Najib.
Then 1MDB was unable to pay interest of
two billion Ringgit on the loans. It had to borrow in order to pay. The
borrowings have thus increased to RM 50 billion due probably to
subsequent borrowings. This increase in the amount of borrowings is
recorded in the PAC report.
Then it was reported that Najib had 681
million USD, equal to 2.6 billion Malaysian Ringgit in his personal and
secret account in Ambank. No Prime Minister of Malaysia should have so
much money in his own account. He should reject any such gift. If it is
not a crime, it is morally wrong.
At first Dato’ Seri Najib denied the
truth of the report. He said he could not be so stupid as to put the
money in his account. His stooges all echoed his words.Then he admitted
that he did have the 2.6 billion Ringgit in his account but it was a
gift. Then he explained that it was a donation from an Arab for his
actions against I.S. and his interest in Islam.Then the Arab became a
prince and subsequently the late King of Saudi Arabia. What is next,
only God knows.
None of his explanation can be believed.
No one would give this huge amount to anyone even if he had done
something for Islam or for any other cause. The belief is that the money
came from 1MDB, the only source of such sums accessible to Najib. He
denies, of course, but he has no documentary evidence to prove the money
is not from 1MDB.
Then IPIC which was appointed as
guarantor for the loans for 1MDB made a statement to the authorities in
London that a sum of 1.7 billion USD which was due to it had not been
paid by 1MDB. It therefore refused to pay the USD50 million interests
due on the loan taken by 1MDB.
The Penang Born Crook Extraordinaire
1MDB said it had paid the money to a
subsidiary of IPIC named Aabar PJS Ltd (British Virgin Islands)..IPIC
says that Aabar PJS(BVI) is not an IPIC company although it has a
company by almost the same name i.e. Aabar PJS Ltd. This company had
received no payment from 1MDB. IPIC implied that the company the 1MDB
paid to was a false company.
A
who is investigating 1MDB money laundering activities
There was a suggestion of fraud and Arul
the CEO of 1MDB admitted that it may have paid to the wrong company. But
1MDB insist that IPIC should pay the USD50 million interests as it was
the guarantor of the loan. 1MDB would not pay.
A guarantor could be obliged to pay if
1MDB was really incapable of paying. But a guarantor is not obliged to
pay simply because 1MDB refused to pay. Besides IPIC as guarantor had
not been paid the USD1.7 billion which was due.
As both 1MDB and IPIC would not pay the
interest on the loans, there would be a default. This will cross default
other loans taken by 1MDB. Since 1MDB is a fully-owned Government
company the defaults will affect the Government’s credit-worthiness. The
Government may not be able to borrow any more in the market.
The Government will have financial
deficits which may lead to bankruptcy if the loans are not serviced and
the principal paid.In the meantime the 2.6 billion Ringgit in Najib’s
account were said to be moved into Singapore banks. Singapore was said
to have frozen accounts of several people pending investigations for
money laundering. Though no mention was made that the frozen accounts
belong to Najib, as a financial center Singapore cannot be seen to cover
up an obvious case of money laundering.
Bank Negara had made a report to the
Attorney General presumably on Najib’s money in Ambank. But the
Attorney-General (AG). dismissed the report, claiming that there was no
wrongdoing by the Prime Minister. Similarly the report by MACC was also
dismissed by the AG. The contents of those reports were made official
secrets to prevent public scrutiny. But the OSA is not meant to cover up
possible crimes.
RM42 Billion is no Peanuts