Lim Kit Siang

Najib with his new persona Malu Apa Bossku welcome to Sandakan to give Malaysian voters the opportunity to speak up  loud and clear in a parliamentary by-election  that 1MDB scandal and Malaysia as a global kleptocracy are subjects of shame for right-thinking Malaysians

It is reported that former Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Najib Razak will be the star speaker of the UMNB-PAS by-election campaign for the PBS candidate in the Sandakan by-election on Friday, the eve of the by-election on Saturday.

Najib with his new persona Malu Apa Bossku is welcome to Sandakan to give Malaysian voters the opportunity to speak up loud and clear in a parliamentary by-election that the monstrous 1MDB scandal and Malaysia as a global kleptocracy are subjects of shame for right-thinking Malaysians.

Najib should come to Sandakan to explain why he had never apologised or expressed regret for the 1MDB scandal, which had brought to the country the 3Is of infamy, ignominy and iniquity as a global kleptocracy.

How can Najib strut around the country with a Malu Apa Bossku message when before the historic decision of May 9, 2018 which brought about a change of government for the first time in six decades, Malaysians were so ashamed  of themselves as Malaysians  because of the 1MDB scandal and Malaysia’s epithet as a global kleptocracy when they went overseas that they dared not identify themselves as Malaysians, but claimed  instead that they were from Thailand, Borneo, Indonesia or even Singapore?

May 9, 2018 saved Malaysia from the ignominy of the  1MDB scandal as Malaysians can again hold
their heads high and identify themselves as Malaysians when abroad, as Malaysia is no more condemned as a global kleptocracy by the world after Najib was ousted in the 14th General Election and  charged in court with scores of corruption charges related to the 1MDB.

For the past four years, the world press had produced  reams of reports and days  of air time about the 1MDB scandal; books had
been written and films made about it while at least 10 countries had launched
investigations on the 1MDB scandal.

The U.S. Justice Department  identified
about US$1.7 billion in assets  illegally
acquired through money diverted from 1MDB, including real estate, art, a super-luxury yacht and proceeds from the film “The Wolf of Wall Street.”  Its first charges against individuals were announced in November last year.

Singapore and Switzerland had imposed financial
penalties on several banks for lapses in anti-money laundering controls related to funds all from 1MDB.

It is reported that yesterday and today, law
enforcement officials from the U.S., Malaysia and Singapore, including representatives from the US Department of Justice and the Attorney-General’s Offices in Malaysia and Singapore, had been meeting near Kuala Lumpur to coordinate their legal approaches toward Goldman Sachs Group Inc. over its work raising money for scandal-plagued 1MDB.

Goldman faced scrutiny in all three countries over its role helping 1MDB raise more than US$6
billion in bond sales that generated some US$600 million in fees for the bank.

Malaysia has filed criminal charges against three Goldman entities, while U.S. prosecutors have charged two former bankers at the firm. Singapore is planning to seek a deferred-prosecution agreement with Goldman.

Up to now, some RM1.5 billion misappropriated from 1MDB had been returned to Malaysia by
the US and Singapore authorities.

A check with the Google search engine on the subject “1MDB scandal” produces 1.2 million results in 38 seconds.

Najib however  has continued to deny the
existence of a 1MDB scandal.

His coming to Sandakan on Friday will be an appropriate occasion for him to explain why he
had continued  to deny the existence of the 1MDB scandal.

There are those who say that there is no need to talk about the 1MDB scandal as the courts
must now  decide whether Najib had been
guilty of grand corruption in 1MDB.

These people cannot be more wrong if they suggest that Malaysia is on the road to become a nation of integrity just because Najib and several big-wigs of the former Barisan Nasional government had been charged with corruption offences.

The 2017 Global Corruption Barometer (GCB) released by Transparency International in February 2017, based on a survey of 16 countries in Asia-Pacific made, had the following eight findings:

· 57% of Malaysians think Police is involved in corruption;

· 48% of Malaysians think Local Government Councillors and Tax Officials are involved in corruption;

· 46% of Malaysians think business executives are involved in corruption;

· 45% of Malaysians think Governnment officials are involved in corruption;

· 41% of Malaysians think Members of Parliament and State Assembly members are involved in corruption;

· 41% of Malaysians thank the Prime Minister and the his officials are involved in corruption;

· 33% of Malaysians think that Judges and Magistrates are involved in corruption; and

·  31% of Malaysians think that Religious Leaders are involved in corruption. 

Other findings of the 2017 GCB were:

· 60% of Malaysians felt that the level of corruption had increased, while 62% felt that the government was handling the right against corruption badly;

· 53% of Malaysians said the government was ineffective in fighting corruption;

· 41% of Malaysians felt that the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) was doing BADLY.

Although there had not been any corruption study or survey after the May 9, 2018 historic
decision,  the anti-corruption war has still
to show bite and greater effectiveness in its fight against corruption  whether in the region or the world apart from dealing with “grand corruption” involving the former Prime Minister, Deputy Prime Minister and former Cabinet Ministers.

Najib’s proposed visit to Sandakan on Friday will help in placing the  corruption issue, whether the 1MDB scandal or Malaysia as a global kleptocracy during his premiership, as a centrepiece of the Sandakan parliamentary by-election.
 
(Media Statement by DAP MP for Iskandar Puteri Lim Kit Siang in Sandakan on Wednesday, 8th May 2019)                                              
                      

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