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Showing posts with label corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corruption. Show all posts

TAIB MAHMUD'S EMPIRE: FROM RAGS TO RICHES


 A vast pool of information has been made available in Sarawak Report (  http://www.sarawakreport.org )  , the website recently uploaded the entire database of the Land and Survey Department of Sarawak that shows more than 1,000 plots of land acquired in recent years by the state, much of which have been passed on to Taib’s close relatives and cronies at dirt-cheap premiums. Many of these plots of land, which total more than 1.5 million hectares, were in fact NCR land, secretively sequestered from the natives.(refer to map below)

 MACC fiasco over Taib Mahmud scandal — Kim Quek
April 02, 2011
Malaysian Insider



APRIL 2 — The credibility of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) took a heavy beating when its two top officials floundered badly in a press conference over its failure to act against the notorious Chief Minister of Sarawak Taib Mahmud.

The latter has been in the limelight lately due to frequent exposures in the Internet of his fabulous wealth and massive land grabs, for which numerous reports have been lodged with the MACC.

In the press conference to present the annual report of MACC’s complaints committee on March 31, both chief commissioner Abu Kassim Mohammed and committee chairman Mohd Nor Abdullah were confronted by journalists over MACC’s deafening silence over long-standing accusations against the chief minister.

While Abu Kassim’s answers were hopelessly evasive, Mohd Nor’s reaction was outright obnoxious. The duo has conveyed this unmistakable message: Chief Minister Taib Mahmud is off-limits, don’t you dare push us further!

To reporters’ various questions such as: whether public complaints have been received, whether files have been opened, how many cases are there, will there be charges, Abu Kassim gave only irrelevant answers such as: we have to investigate all corruption, we cannot turn away any investigation, silence doesn’t mean inaction, etc. As questions persisted, he eventually repeated like a parrot to all further questions: “When there is a complaint, it will investigate.”

Mohd Nor, who was sitting next to Abu Kassim, stepped in to warn the reporters to back off. Obviously basking in his credentials as a former Court of Appeal judge, he asked reporters not to breach the Printing Presses and Publication Act (PPPA), which stipulates that news can only be published if there is reasonable cause to believe it is true. He said: “If you ask me whether there is any investigation on the chief minister, you may have breached the Act, as you already have the pre-conception of the CM’s corruption. You cannot ask me that. You cannot fish for evidence. Have you done your investigation? Inquire the truth first, then ask.”

While Abu Kassim’s utter timidity to touch on anything relating to the chief minister merely confirms what is already public knowledge — that the MACC is completely impotent to deal with any corruption case of ruling Barisan Nasional’s heavyweights — it is Mohd Nor’s menacing and stupid threats to news media that have riled the otherwise complacent public.

Mohd Nor talked as if we are ignorant of the mountain of evidence of corruption and abuse of power by Taib Mahmud unearthed and circulating on the Internet. Evidence against him is so voluminous and detailed that it formed a two-inch-thick book which was formally handed to the MACC. And reports that were lodged almost one year ago have met with only silence from the MACC.

The reports against Taib are mainly based on the website Sarawak Report (http://www.sarawakreport.org) which chronicles Taib family’s multi-billion ringgit fortunes in the form of overseas real estate properties, Malaysian enterprises and large areas of land in Sarawak. The Sarawak Report website carries amazing details of Taib family’s assets, complete with proof of ownership extracted from company registries and land registries. Perhaps it is these meticulous details appearing as incontrovertible proof that have unnerved the MACC, causing its two top officials to make a fool of themselves in public.

As an example of the vast pool of information made available in Sarawak Report, the website recently uploaded the entire database of the Land and Survey Department of Sarawak that shows more than 1,000 plots of land acquired in recent years by the state, much of which have been passed on to Taib’s close relatives and cronies at dirt-cheap premiums. Many of these plots of land, which total more than 1.5 million hectares, were in fact NCR land, secretively sequestered from the natives, whose complaints have resulted in more 200 land litigations. The few cases that have been heard by the courts have ended in favour of the native landowners, indicating the illegality of Taib’s land grab.

As proof that Taib’s family has been major beneficiaries of this illegal land grab, the names of some 50 companies featured in the land register as original recipients of land from the state were listed, each identified with members of Taib’s family.

Another piece of bad news for the embattled chief minister is the recent disclosure of a so-called black list of 49 companies spread worldwide, each linked to Taib’s family. This list, announced by the Bruno Manser Fund, a Swiss NGO dedicated to the cause of the oppressed Sarawak natives, shows 13 of these companies are located in Malaysia, 10 in Australia, nine in Canada, seven in Hong Kong, the balance in UK and other parts of the world.

The beauty of the entire Taib corruption episode is that Taib himself never really denies the existence of his family’s vast assets.

In an interview during the cyber campaign launched recently by him to fend off the various accusations, he attributed his family’s fortune to the entrepreneur genius of his daughter Jamilah. Taib explained that when he left the federal government three decades ago, he gave some money to Jamilah from his gratuity to start off her business in Canada. Due to her business acumen, that business eventually snowballed into an international business empire.

While one is still stretching his imagination as to what little credibility could be given to Taib’s rag-to-riches story, the answer came in another interview of Taib. To buttress the veracity of his story, Taib elaborated further that he had no choice but to do business abroad 30 years ago where his well-educated children were doing business. He said:

“I don’t want conflict of interests to haunt me all the time. If I do business inside the country, people will say I use my influence to enrich myself, so we did it outside the country.”

What a terrible lie that was! Who in Sarawak doesn’t know that the state’s largest conglomerate CMS is the flagship of Taib family’s business empire which creams off the juiciest contracts from the state, much to the revulsion of the local business community?

With that blatant lie, what credibility can we give to Taib’s self-made billionaire story?

Facing such awesome evidence of massive corruption, the chairman of MACC’s complaints committee had the gall to make legal threats to inquisitive inquirers, as if Taib is a victim of dubious accusation!

The Taib Mahmud story is only one of many of Barisan Nasional’s numerous mega corruption scandals involving its reigning elites which have been routinely neutered by our law-enforcing institutions, be it the MACC, police, Attorney-General or the judiciary.

And the latest theatrics of the MACC described here only confirms that nothing has changed despite Prime Minister Najib Razak’s much-trumpeted reforms via his numerous slogans.


exclusive-taibs-foreign-property-portfolio/http://www.sarawakreport.org/2010/06/exclusive-taibs-foreign-property-portfolio/

http://www.sarawakreport.org/2011/03/too-old-and-forgetful-taib-forgets-his-own-businesses/

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MALAYSIA'S CORRUPTION PERCEPTION INDEX

RASUAH SEMAKIN PARAH DI MALAYSIA

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POSTION 47 LAST YEAR SLIPPED TO 56 IN 2009

TI-M president Datuk Paul Low said Malaysia’s ranking had slipped to 56th position this year from 47th last year, out of 180 countries surveyed in terms of index of corruption perception.

This "may be attributed to the perception of little progress in combating corruption, and lack of political will in implementing effective anti-corruption measures."

Reforms earn praise, but graft ranking drops

KUALA LUMPUR (Nov 17, 2009) : Transparency International Malaysia (T-IM) has acknowledged Malaysia’s efforts to deal with corruption although the country’s ranking on the corruption perception index (CPI) this year has declined.

TI-M president Datuk Paul Low said Malaysia’s ranking had slipped to 56th position this year from 47th last year, out of 180 countries surveyed.

However, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak’s moves to initiate reforms in some institutions, especially the judiciary, and the setting up of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, to make them more independent, transparent and accountable, was the way forward for the country, he said at a press conference to announce Malaysia’s position in the Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index 2009, today.

He said Transparency International Malaysia believed that the way forward for the country was to seriously combat corruption and to make government decisions and transactions more visible and transparent.

Low, however, suggested that the government should be more transparent in its procurement process by implementing "integrity agreement" with vendors to act as preventive measures to curb corruption.

Low said Malaysia’s decline in ranking in CPI 2009 of 0.6, from 5.1 in 2008 to 4.5 this year, "may be attributed to the perception of little progress in combating corruption, and lack of political will in implementing effective anti-corruption measures".

Examples giving rise to the concern were the Port Klang Free Zone (PKFZ) fiasco and the auditor-general’s annual report highlighting extraordinary public procurement abuses, he said.

"However, there are positive signs. The PKFZ fiasco is being actively and vigorously investigated, police reports have been made and suits have been taken against certain parties, and corrective measures have been taken.

"The United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) was ratified in September 2008. Integrity is a Key Result Area for the government, with the CPI as a key productivity index. The prime minister has formed a high-level task force to study and make recommendations for action to be taken on the auditor-general’s 2008 report," he said.

Meanwhile, DAP veteran and Ipoh Timur Member of Parliament Lim Kit Siang views Malaysia's drop in ranking as a national shame.

"I have no doubt that the death of DAP political aide Teoh Beng Hock on July 16 at the building housing the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission building in Shah Alam and the MACC's targeting Pakatan Rakyat representatives as major factors for Malaysia’s worst-ever TI CPI ranking and score," he said in a statement.

sun2surf

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COMPARE AND CONTRAST STATEMENTS MADE BY 2 PERSONALITIES


"We must be able to differentiate that a breach of party ethics and discipline is not criminal in nature" said the MACC Chief Commissioner.


“Some are found guilty but they can carry on. Some were found guilty, (but) cannot contest but can hold position in government; some are known to be involved in corruption but are cleared.” chided former PM and UMNO President.

*Umno needs to be more serious


*MACC: Breach of ethics "not criminal in nature"


Umno needs to be more serious


Former Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said today the future of Umno depends on its leaders and their seriousness in getting rid of money politics in the party.

“If they choose to be serious to clean up Umno, then there is a future for Umno. If not, they are going to lose the next election,” Mahathir told reporters after the launch of Wisma Sahoca (Sultan Abdul Hamid Old Collegians Association) at Kelana Jaya here.

Mahathir said Umno's disciplinary board had an opportunity to clean the party's name and restore public confidence in the party but it failed to deliver because "they did not do their task properly or completely".

Mahathir, who is also permanent president of Sahoca, said the decision by the board was unfair.

He then cited the example of the board finding two persons guilty of the same offence, but were given different punishments, "which goes against the principle of justice".

“I believe many of them are lawyers, they (board) ought to know.”

Although Mahathir did not mention names, he was obviously referring to the board finding Malacca chief minister Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam and Umno youth deputy chief Khairy Jamaluddin guilty of breach of ethics, but the former was barred from contesting the deputy president's post while the latter was only given a warning.

Asked to elaborate, he said: “Some are found guilty but they can carry on. Some were found guilty, (but) cannot contest but can hold position in government; some are known to be involved in corruption but are cleared.”

However, he did not mention who he thought was known to be corrupt.

When asked if the board should allow an appeal from Mohd Ali, Mahathir said the move will further erode public confidence in the board and the party.

Asked if he was confident with the next batch of Umno leaders, he bluntly said he was not, with "most of them".

Mahathir said he received an invitation to attend next week’s Umno general assembly although he had quit the party. He said he might be “going as an observer” but would not confirm his attendance.

Hemananthani Sivanandam / sun2surf
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

MACC: Breach of ethics "not criminal in nature"


The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) said today they are not involved in investigations pertaining to political parties' ethics as a breach of discipline or ethics "is not criminal in nature".

Its chief commissioner Datuk Seri Ahmad Said Hamdan said this when asked to comment on calls by opposition parties that the MACC investigate Umno vice-president Datuk Seri Mohd Ali Rustam who was barred from contesting in party elections after he was found guilty of money politics.

"We welcome anyone who wants to make a report but we must be able to differentiate that a breach of party ethics and discipline is not criminal in nature," he said.

He said the MACC investigations director Datuk Shukri Abdullah was still awaiting reports if there were criminal elements in the case being acted on by the Umno Disciplinary Board recently.

On another matter, he said the MACC will record statements from several more Perak assemblymen pertaining to the suspension of Menteri Besar Datuk Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir and six executive council members from attending the state legislative assembly.

Ahmad Said said their statements would be crucial to the investigations on the matter.

Asked whether the assemblymen were from the Barisan Nasional or the opposition pact, he said, "We will also call those from the BN if necessary."

He was speaking to reporters after attending the commission's event with the Tengku Mahkota of Pahang, Tengku Abdullah Sultan Ahmad Shah, here today.

Yesterday, the MACC recorded the statements of four members of the Perak rights and privileges committee, namely Loke Chee Yan (Kepayang assemblyman), Ong Boon Piow (Tebing Tinggi), Sum Cheok Leng (Bercham) and Chan Ming Kai (Simpang Pulai).

Another committee member, Husin Din (Selinsing), was question by the MACC on March 17 while Speaker V. Sivakumar had his statement recorded on Feb 26.

Asked on their statements, Ahmad Said said the process was to establish whether there were elements of abuse of power in the suspension of Zambry and his six executive council members.

"To us, there seem to be so, that is why we carry out the investigations in the first place," he said.

Bernama

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LEE KUAN YEW'S OBSERVATION ON MONEY POLITICS

The Singapore Statesman, the peer of Tunku, Mahathir and the gang denies the existence of money politics in his nation state of Singapore. He made the remark on Singapore 43rd national day celebration last week.


Kuan Yew: Money politics root cause of problems



Sun2surf/BERNAMA

SINGAPORE (14 August, 2008): The political problems faced by many countries in Asia are due to money politics but the problem did not take root in Singapore because "we have a Division One team in charge", said former Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.

He said that in many Asian countries, money politics was simply the "code word" for buying votes to gain power and, after that was done, "to recover your expenses plus some profit for the next round of vote-buying".

"One of the big problems they now face, in other countries, is the people in power want to reserve the money, keep it for themselves. So, they exclude young able people who want to join their team.
"The result is, there is no talent inside the existing parties," Lee, who is Minister Mentor, was quoted by the local Today newspaper as saying at a gathering of his Tanjong Pagar constituents last night in celebration of Singapore's 43rd National Day which was last Saturday.

"In other countries, elections do not put up a Division One team. They are a Division Three, either a B team or a C team in charge. In Singapore, we carefully select our candidates," the newspaper quoted him as saying.

"Over the years, with each election, we see the quality of the MPs, their education levels, their competence, their abilities, their energy.

"Their youthfulness is renewed and we have a leadership thats able to meet the rising standards of the population," Lee said.

But today's younger generation did not understand all this, Lee said, adding that "they say, oh, lets have multi-party politics. Lets have different parties change and be in charge of the Government."

"Is it that simple? You vote in a Division Three government, not a Division One government, and the whole economy will just subside within three, four years. Finished!" he said.

Lee said such proponents should study Taiwan, Thailand and the Philippines, where rotating party governments had led to more mismanagement.

"And a 'free-wheeling press' has not cleaned up corruption, although according to American 'liberal' democracy theories, it is designed to do so," he said.

Lee said that even in the face of a global recession, Singapore had enough long-term investments to buffer the setbacks.

"Why are we on top of our problem? Because there's a government that's planning ahead, seeing ahead, calculating ahead, making the right decision," Lee said.

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OSA REMAINS INTACT

The "Official Secret Act" will not be amended or abolished, according to the Minister in the Prime Minister Department.

The Official Secrets Act 1972 (Act 88), also known as the OSA, is a statute in Malaysia prohibiting the dissemination of information classified as an official secret. The legislation is based on the Official Secrets Act of the United Kingdom. After criticism of the act for lacking clarity, it was amended in 1986.[1]

Provisions

The act defines an "official secret" as:

...any document specified in the Schedule and any information and material relating thereto and includes any other official document, information and material as may be classified as 'Top Secret', 'Secret', 'Confidential' or 'Restricted', as the case may be, by a Minister, the Menteri Besar or Chief Minister of a State or such public officer [as may be authorised to classify such documents by a Minister, Menteri Besar or Chief Minister].

The Schedule to the Act covers "Cabinet documents, records of decisions and deliberations including those of Cabinet committees", as well as similar documents for state executive councils. It also includes "documents concerning national security, defence and international relations".

Malaysia's Official Secrets Act is a broadly-worded law which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment, as well as significant lesser penalties for the actions associated with the wrongful collection, possession or communication of official information. Any public officer can declare any material an official secret -- a certification which cannot be questioned in court . The act allows for arrest and detention without a warrant, and substantially reverses the burden of proof. It states that "until the contrary is proven," any of the activities proscribed under the act will be presumed to have been undertaken "for a purpose prejudicial to the safety or interests of Malaysia." It is not necessary for the authorities to show that the accused person was guilty of a particular act, and states that even if no act is proved, the accused person may still be convicted on the basis of "the circumstances of the case, his conduct or his known character...".

Govt won’t amend OSA, says Nazri

The Edge

KUALA LUMPUR: The government has no intention of amending the Official Secrets Act (OSA) as the Cabinet can declassify any document at any time, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz said.

He was replying to a supplementary question from Dr Siti Mariah Mahmud (Kota Raja-PAS) who asked whether the government intended to draft a freedom of information act to protect whistleblowers and complement the government’s effort to fight corruption.

Without answering whether the government would introduce such a law, he said the Cabinet could meet to declassify any matter from the OSA.

Nazri earlier told parliament that the Anti-Corruption Agency (ACA) had brought 544 charges against government officials for various offences between 2003 and 2007.

“These involved 436 cases under the Corruption Prevention Act 1997, 67 cases under the Penal Code and other legislations as well as one under the Anti-Money Laundering Act,” he said.

The minister said the ACA would shift its emphasis from enforcement and punitive actions to a focus on internal control by encouraging government departments to work with the agency in various programmes to prevent corruption, misappropriation and the abuse of power.

“This will be implemented through the formation of a Joint Committee to Prevent Corruption, which is an extension of the existing efforts implemented through the Committee for Integrity in Management (CIM),” he added.

The joint committee was linked directly with critical and high-risk agencies, Nazri said. “By focusing on critical agencies, it will have a bigger impact on the effectiveness of corruption prevention efforts in this country.”

Nazri said the ACA would step up its cooperation with the National Audit Department to ensure early action in dealing with government agencies deemed more prone to corruption, abuse of power and impropriety.

The ACA would also pay more attention to “intelligence-based investigation”, particularly those involving syndicated corruption, the minister said. “It will involve the use of intelligence in corruption cases to increase the investigative capability against government departments,” he said.

To a question from Lim Kit Siang (Ipoh Timur-DAP) on whether the government actually had the “political will” to fight corruption considering Malaysia was ranked 43rd on Transparency International’s index, Nazri said the matter was part of Barisan Nasional’s manifesto since 2004.

He said corruption would be difficult to eradicate in a short time and urged the opposition to work alongside the government to stem the practice.

In a press release later, Sivarasa Rasiah (Subang-PKR) said the government must have the “political will” to prevent corruption by drafting a freedom of information act and protect whistleblowers.

“If not, the government under Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is only making empty promises,” he added.

According to Sivarasa, the government had never declassified any confidential documents of public interests such as the toll concession agreements. “Instead, it is the Selangor state government under Pakatan Rakyat that started to declassify confidential documents as an early measure to improve transparency and governance,” he said.

The PKR vice-president said he had proposed a motion for a freedom of information legislation to be debated in parliament that had been excluded from the current sitting.

Sivarasa’s view was backed by Mohamed Azmin Ali (Gombak-PKR), who highlighted that freedom of information act had been introduced in 55 countries, including Zimbabwe. “The countries that are still behind are Malaysia and possibly Mongolia,” he said when debating the motion of thanks on the royal address yesterday.

Azmin said India had abolished its OSA and enacted a right to information act that allowed every Indian citizen to obtain any information, record or document within 30 days.

On corporate governance, he questioned Malayan Banking Bhd’s (Maybank) purchase of a 100% stake in Bank Internasional Indonesia (BII) at the price of RM8.6 billion.

“The acquisition process has been criticised by the financial community as it did not comply with corporate governance standards.

“Maybank paid 4.65 times the book value (of BII) and set a new benchmark for (the purchase of) a bank in Indonesia,” Azmin said, adding that the highest price paid for a bank in Indonesia was about 2.5 times book value

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