I read the 1MDB’s Chief Executive Officer Arul Kanda Kandasamy’s interview with Indonesia’s news magazine Tempo on the ties between 1MDB and the tycoon-fugive from justice, Jho Low, with amazement.
Arul now claims that Low was actually PetroSaudi Interntional (PSI)’s broker to negotiate a joint venture deal between PSI and 1MDB in September 2009, which I am hearing for the first time.
If so, why why didn’t the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak or anyone in 1MDB or the Malaysian Government make such a claim in the past eight years, and why has such a claim only surfaced now – in April 2018, after the billion-ringgit Equanimity luxury superyacht was impounded by the Indonesian authorites in Bali on the request of FBI in late February?
Has Arul Kanda Kandasamy being paid superlative remuneration as 1MDB Chief Executive Officer to weave fantastic stories and fake news about the 1MDB scandal?
The United States Department of Justice, it its largest kleptocratic litigation to forfeit 1MDB-linked assets in the United States, United Kingdom and Switzerland, alleged that a total of US$4.5 billion was misappropriated from 1MDB by high-level officials of the fund and their associates, including “Malaysian Official One (MO1)”.
Low is accused in the US kleptocratic litigation of using 1MDB-linked funds to buy Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio a US$3.2 million Picasso painting, and giving about US$9 million in jewellery to Australian model Miranda Kerr.
DiCaprio and Kerr have turned over the items to US authorities and promised to co-operate in the 1MDB probe.
The lawsuits also said US$681 million from 1MDB was transferred to the account of “Malaysian Official 1”, which US and Malaysian sources have previously identified as Najib, and Low’s gifting of a RM144 million pink diamond necklace to “wife of MO1”.
Although Najib has denied any wrongdoing, the Prime Minister has falsely claimed that he had been cleared of any wrongdoing in the 1MDB scandal by the Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee.
Now, Arul is now spinning a new story about the various characters and their “new roles” in the 1MDB scandal.
In his Tempo interview, Arul Kanda also maintained that Low has no ties with Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak.
How does Arul Kanda know?
Najib has never publicly stated that he had no ties with Jho Low. Is he going to say so now?
Kanda also said he was also not aware of any ties between Low and Najib’s stepson Riza Aziz.
“I don’t know. Jho Low never told me. Najib also never told me,” he said.
I find this incredibly unbelievabe, when Jho Low himself had admitted in an interview in March 2015 that he were “good friends with Riza”, and that he had known Riza for 16 years (in March 2015) since Low studied at the prestigious school Harrow in the United Kingdom while Riza studied at a nearby school.
Low admitted: “Through Riza, I met his parents.”
True, Low had denied allegations that he had acted as a business front man for Najib or his wife, and insisted that his dealings with Riza were limited to the the real estate transactions conducted “at arm’s length fair market value”, he had however admtited publicly that he and Riza were “good friends” and that “through Riza” he had met Najib and Rosmah Mansor.
Isn’t Arul Kanda unaware of the specific allegations in the US DoJ litigation, that the idea of a joint venture between PSI and 1MDB was mooted in late summer of 2009, including a meeting that Low arranged abroad a yacht off the coast of Monaco, which invovled “MO1”; and in particular Paragraph 55 of the US DOJ kleptocratic litigation on the forfeiture of the 1MDB-linked assets which states:
“55. A special meeting of the 1MDB Board was held on September 26, 2009, which was attended by 1MDB OFFICERS 1 and 2 and members of the Board. LOW also attended this meeting. Just prior to the meeting, LOW spoke by telephone with MALAYSIAN OFFICIAL 1”.
What then is reason for such a revisionism in the sordid tale of the 1MDB scandal?
Is this going to be the official version while other versions, even if true, would fall under the rubic of “fake news” once the Anti-Fake News legislation becomes law, probably tomorrow or day after, which will entail draconian penalties of RM500,000 fine or six years’ jail or both if spread?
(Media Statement in Parliament on Tuesday, April 3, 2018)