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Author: atira

[Jenayah] SR, Wall Street Journal berterusan memfitnah Najib- PANAS! bukti dah keluar

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Post time 5-7-2015 08:20 PM | Show all posts
EJALTI replied at 5-7-2015 07:12 PM
Iols up kan thread nih sesambil tunggu buka posa.....

  
Mashur kita seantario dunia...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/bu ... 65bc30d0_story.html
Malaysian leader faces risk of criminal charges over fund   

      
FILE- In this May 11, 2015 file photo, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak addresses delegates during his speech at the Malaysia’s ruling party United Malays National Organization’s (UMNO) anniversary celebration in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Najib is facing the risk of a criminal charge over allegations that millions of dollars were funneled from an indebted state fund to his personal bank accounts, the first time the country’s leader has faced criminal allegations. The attorney general confirmed late Saturday, July 4, 2015 he has received documents from an official investigation that made the link between Najib and the investment fund 1MDB. (Joshua Paul, File/Associated Press)
  By Eileen Ng | AP July 5 at 8:05 AM
  KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Prime Minister Najib Razak is facing the risk of criminal charges over allegations that hundreds of millions of dollars were funneled from an indebted state fund to his personal bank accounts, the first time a Malaysian leader has faced criminal allegations.
Malaysia’s attorney general confirmed late Saturday that he had received documents from an official investigation that made the link between Najib and the investment fund 1MDB. The existence of the documents was first reported by The Wall Street Journal’s Asia edition on Friday, showing some $700 million were wired from entities linked to the fund into Najib’s accounts.
The documents sent to the attorney general pave the way for possible criminal charges.
It is one of the worst political crises for Najib, who has come under increasing criticism over his leadership.
Najib, who has denied taking any money for personal gains, said Sunday that he would consult with his lawyers to decide his next course of action on the “malicious accusations” against him.
  “It’s damning and disastrous for Najib,” said Wan Saiful Wan Jan, who heads the Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs think-tank.
  “This is really uncharted territory in Malaysian politics. For the first time ever, we are seeing a prime minister facing the possibility of a criminal charge,” he said.
1MDB, set up by Najib in 2009 to develop new industries, has accumulated 42 billion ringgit ($11.1 billion) in debt after its energy ventures abroad faltered. Critics, led by former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, have voiced concerns about 1MDB’s massive debt and alleged lack of transparency.
The Wall Street Journal report said five deposits were made into Najib’s accounts and that the two largest transactions, worth $620 million and $61 million, were done in March 2013 ahead of general elections.
Najib slammed the report as part of a “political sabotage” by Mahathir to remove him. Mahathir, who stepped down in 2003 after 22 years in power but has remained an influential political figure, has been leading calls for Najib to step down.
1MDB said it had never provided any funds to Najib.
Attorney General Abdul Gani Patail, however, said a task force investigating 1MDB for alleged impropriety had given him papers “including documents related to allegations of fund transfer into the account of the prime minister.”
Abdul Gani said the task force raided offices of three companies linked to 1MDB that were allegedly involved in the fund transfer. He didn’t give further details on the documents or say what actions would be taken.
Najib’s deputy, Muhyiddin Yassin, said the allegations must be investigated because they tarnish Najib’s credibility and integrity. Opposition lawmakers have said Najib should go on leave and also declare his assets.
Home Minister Zahid Hamidi said the allegations against Najib were “reckless” and “bordering on criminal offenses” because they were based on unverified documents. He warned that police would “not hesitate to use the full force of the law against those who attempt to harm Malaysia’s economy and our democratic process.”
  “Even if nothing comes up from the investigation, the damage to Najib’s reputation has been done. The pressure for him to step down will increase,” said Wan Saiful, the head of the think-tank.
Najib, the son of a former prime minister, took over the premiership in 2009. He has fought criticism over his management of the economy, and being implicated in the murder of a Mongolian model nine years ago. Najib has said he had nothing to do with the model, and two security officers linked to Najib at the time were found guilty of her murder.

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Post time 5-7-2015 08:21 PM | Show all posts
If I wanted to steal money, I wouldn’t put it in Malaysia, says Najib

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak today rubbished claims he had stolen 1Malaysia Development Bhd's (1MDB) funds, saying that if he wanted to do so, he would not have placed the money in a bank account in Malaysia.

He said he was merely a victim of certain quarters who were trying to twist public perception so that the opposition would gain more votes in the general election.

"In the past one or two days, they have come up with all sorts of stories. I have become a victim of their relentless attacks lately, that I supposedly stole a huge amount of money and placed it into my personal accounts.

"I am thankful, there are some who say they don't believe the news, including Datuk Haron Din on his Twitter. He said it didn't make sense for me to do something like that.

"If I wanted to steal, surely I wouldn't steal the money and bring it into an account in Malaysia. That is, if I wanted to be a robber (penyamun). But of course, as a prime minister, I won't betray Malaysians and what belongs to Malaysians," he said in his speech at the Bandar Rinching Mosque in Semenyih. – July 5, 2015.

MORE TO COME

- See more at: http://www.themalaysianinsider.c ... thash.D6fvaw1w.dpuf


kalu dia nak melanun, dia takkan letak dlm akaun kat malaysia katanya
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Post time 5-7-2015 08:24 PM | Show all posts
well...takde sapa pun kata kau mencuri, org kata duit tu masuk akaun ko ajer...
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Post time 5-7-2015 08:38 PM | Show all posts

Penyokong Najib ada...d jek ada..badak sumbu ada

kan kan kan

bang kem level tinggi dia x layan isu gini..

ahaks
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Post time 5-7-2015 09:19 PM | Show all posts
Harap lepas ni jangan ada pihak yg pertikaikan pandangan Datuk Haron Din seorang ulama yg luas pandangannya
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Post time 5-7-2015 09:29 PM | Show all posts
kalau benda ni betul tak apa
tapi kalau fitnah macam mana pula?
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Post time 5-7-2015 09:32 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Haron din tu betol dah statement dia. Bukan dia sokong najib pon, tp dia suruh siasat dulu. Ulama, kena hati2 bagi statement. Aku pon menyampah dgn geng ug, tp statement haron din da ok lah.

Thread ni slow pasal hjg mgu , tgk lah esok, kompom meletop.

P/s. Najib ni mmg dah tak boleh selamat dah..
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Post time 5-7-2015 09:37 PM | Show all posts
hzln replied at 5-7-2015 08:24 PM
well...takde sapa pun kata kau mencuri, org kata duit tu masuk akaun ko ajer...

Eleh...duit petty cash... habuan nak beli kropok leko utk meeting
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:03 PM | Show all posts
tentulah malaysia tempat simpan duit paling selamat.bila you menteri kewangan,menteri pertahanan.menteri dlm negeri,bank negara bawah you.you proxy o rosmah.so la ni wall stree tak kata you curik duit.dia kata duit tu berakhir di akaun pm najip.so ke mana duit tu pergi selepas landing di akaun peribadi najip?
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:04 PM | Show all posts
sedangkan ceo publiklisted tak boleh guna akaun peribadi buat urusan syarikat.inikan pula ceo negara malaysia.mewakilkan akaun peribadi utk tampung duit dgn gunakan alsan demi kepentingan rakyat.
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:09 PM | Show all posts
Power Struggle in Malaysia Pits Former Premier Against a Protégé
By THOMAS FULLER and LOUISE STORYJUNE 17, 2015
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Prime Minister Najib Razak of Malaysia, in orange, at the general assembly of the United Malays National Organization in Kuala Lumpur last year. Credit Azhar Rahim/European Pressphoto Agency
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PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia — Malaysia’s governing party is at war with itself, embroiled in a power struggle that is destabilizing the country and threatening the party’s nearly six-decade stretch of uninterrupted governance.

The battle has revealed itself publicly in a nasty spat between two political titans. Mahathir Mohamad, a former prime minister who turns 90 next month, is the chief architect of a political insurgency aiming to oust the man he helped put into office six years ago, Prime Minister Najib Razak.

Having lost none of the combativeness honed during more than two decades in power, Mr. Mahathir is pressing allegations of malfeasance in a sovereign wealth fund, criticizing the “lavish” lifestyle of the prime minister’s wife, and has resurrected troubling questions about the murder of a Mongolian woman, the mistress of a former top aide to Mr. Najib.

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RELATED COVERAGE

Mahathir Mohamad at a conference in Tokyo last month.Malaysian Ex-Prime Minister Unleashes CriticismJUNE 17, 2015
“I’ve had quite a long time in government, and I’ve learned a few things,” Mr. Mahathir said in an interview at his office on Wednesday in Putrajaya, the administrative capital he built from scratch when he was prime minister.

Photo

Mahathir Mohamad, a former Malaysian prime minister, is the chief architect of an insurgency looking to topple Mr. Najib, whom he helped put in office some six years ago. Credit Eugene Hoshiko/Associated Press
Mr. Najib “wants to leave his own legacy,” he said. “But what he does is verging on criminal.”

Mr. Najib has denied allegations of abuse of power and urged patience while the country’s auditor general completes a report on the transactions of the sovereign wealth fund. “If there is any misuse of power, we will not shield anyone,” he told a Malaysian television channel in April. The report is due at the end of the month.

The political combat has transfixed this nation of 30 million people, an officially Muslim country with one of the most developed economies in the region.

The latest round took place early this month when Mr. Najib was scheduled to address a public forum on the questions swirling around his leadership.

When Mr. Najib failed to show up, Mr. Mahathir took the stage. But he had just begun to speak when the police shut him down, cutting off his microphone and escorting him off the stage.

This is the third time in Mr. Mahathir’s career that he has turned on his former protégés, and he succeeded in sidelining the first two. Another former deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, is in prison on charges of sodomy, which is illegal in Malaysia. Mr. Anwar’s five-year prison sentence, affirmed by the country’s highest court this year, was the culmination of trials that began when Mr. Mahathir fired Mr. Anwar as his deputy prime minister in 1998, declaring “I cannot accept a man who is a sodomist to become the leader of this country.”

The second time was nine years ago, when Mr. Mahathir came out of retirement and lashed out at his successor, Abdullah Badawi, for what he said was poor economic management. Mr. Abdullah resigned, and Mr. Najib took over as prime minister.

Mr. Najib’s approval ratings have plummeted over the past year amid bleaker economic prospects and higher living costs, and Mr. Mahathir says he fears that the party will lose elections if Mr. Najib remains at the helm. But he also expressed little faith in the long-term prospects of the party, the United Malays National Organization, which has led coalition governments since independence from Britain in 1957.

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In the interview on Wednesday, Mr. Mahathir said that the party he led for decades, known as UMNO, lacks vision and talented people, and that it has become a repository of patronage-seeking politicians seeking to monopolize the spoils of power.

“The little Napoleons in UMNO try to keep out people who are more intelligent than themselves,” he said.

Government ministers and members of Parliament have been pressed to declare their allegiance in the dispute, and many have been cagey, afraid to alienate either their current leader or the next one if Mr. Mahathir gets his way.

For now, the divided opposition poses little threat. Its leader, Mr. Anwar, is in prison, and the unwieldy three-party coalition he led appears to have dissolved this week.

The political imbroglio comes on top of economic problems. About a third of government revenues comes from oil and gas production, whose prices have fallen steeply, and the government has been forced to pass an unpopular sales tax to make up for the loss.

Murray Hiebert, an expert on Southeast Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, says the country’s political troubles “could hardly come at a worse time.”

“The prime minister is focused on political survival when the country’s economy is slowing due to low oil prices and falling exports resulting from China’s economic slowdown,” he said. The combination, he said, is “giving pause to the foreign investors Malaysia is seeking to court.”

Photo

Mr. Najib has denied allegations of abuse of power and financial malfeasance. Credit Kiyoshi Ota/European Pressphoto Agency
The sour economy has also thrown into relief what Mr. Mahathir and others describe as the Najib family’s jet-setting lifestyle of shopping trips in world capitals and the buying of expensive real estate in the United States.

Mr. Mahathir criticized Mr. Najib’s wife, Rosmah Mansor, for her “lavish lifestyle” and for acting “almost if she was a prime minister.”

Mr. Mahathir has also dredged up questions related to the case of Altantuya Shaariibuu, a Mongolian model who was murdered by two of Mr. Najib’s bodyguards in 2006. While the bodyguards were convicted, Mr. Mahathir has demanded to know who gave the orders.

But at the heart of his dispute with Mr. Najib is Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund, which has debts running into the billions of dollars and is overseen by Mr. Najib, who is chairman of its board of advisers.

Mr. Mahathir says the fund, 1Malaysia Development Berhad, or 1MDB, is missing “huge sums of money” that Mr. Najib has been unable to account for.

The fund has been criticized for the last several years for taking on expensive debt as well as for some of its investments, which opponents say have benefited supporters of Mr. Najib’s political party. “He has never been able to explain how the money was spent,” Mr. Mahathir said Wednesday. “They give a list of payments, but nobody believes it.”

Mr. Najib did not respond to requests for comment emailed to his spokesman.

The fund has also drawn controversy for its close relationship with a financier named Jho Low, a friend of Mr. Najib and of his stepson. Mr. Low has been involved in the sale of tens of millions of dollars of luxury real estate to the stepson in the United States.

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Though Mr. Low holds no official position with 1MDB, he has acknowledged advising the fund, and several of his friends have held senior positions there. In recent months, documents have been published by The Edge, a Malaysian newspaper, and Sarawak Report, a British blog, showing that Mr. Low was instrumental in a deal between 1MDB and a Saudi oil company, PetroSaudi International. The newspaper also said the documents show that a company, Good Star Limited, was controlled by Mr. Low and received hundreds of millions of dollars from 1MDB as part of the oil deal.

Mr. Low did not respond to requests for comment.

In a statement to The New York Times this week, 1MDB said that Good Star was owned by PetroSaudi and noted that PetroSaudi had confirmed that 1MDB said it had provided information about these transactions to the Malaysian authorities that are investigating the sovereign fund.

The payments by 1MDB are attracting attention in part because the fund is floundering. In recent weeks, the government announced a restructuring plan that involves the fund’s acceptance of money from the International Petroleum Investment Company, an investment fund affiliated with the Abu Dhabi government that has also made numerous deals with Mr. Low.

1MDB has issued statements disputing the notion that it is being bailed out. “This is a business transaction, not a loan, not any kind of debt and not a bailout,” the fund said in its statement to The Times.

Mr. Mahathir’s criticisms of the management of 1MDB, which he makes in regular blog postings and in public comments, are closely followed in Malaysia. But they have also been greeted with cynicism by those who say that money politics and bailouts of government-linked companies were very much a part of Mr. Mahathir’s 22 years in power.

“Mahathir is being disingenuous,” said Ibrahim Suffian, the director of the Merdeka Center, an independent polling company. “What we are seeing today did not happen overnight. It’s been heading this way for decades.”

Still, the concerns over 1MDB seem to have gained traction.

“We have been talking about and highlighting 1MDB for the last five years, and although it slowly gained momentum as a national issue, things changed the moment Mahathir picked 1MDB as an issue to bring down Najib,” said Rafizi Ramli, an opposition Parliament member. “For the first time, a government scandal has reached the attention of both sides of the political divide. In fact, it’s a bipartisan issue.”

Thomas Fuller reported from Putrajaya, and Louise Story from New Y
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:11 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Melayu ameno pasir gudang ckap ni semua angkara cina dap
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:18 PM | Show all posts
Edited by Changa at 5-7-2015 10:20 PM
hzln replied at 5-7-2015 08:21 PM
If I wanted to steal money, I wouldn’t put it in Malaysia, says Najib

Prime Minister Datuk Seri  ...

mungkin la heshe tak guna uang itu untuk personal gain namun motif masuk akaun peribadi??
untuk proses penyucian dahulu ke gimana?

akak syak uang itu ujung nya masuk akaun BN untuk biayai last general election??
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:21 PM | Show all posts
hzln replied at 5-7-2015 08:21 PM
If I wanted to steal money, I wouldn’t put it in Malaysia, says Najib

Prime Minister Datuk Seri  ...

Modal melanun ada di Cayman, ni modal nak tabur kat ketua cawangan bak seratus dua ratus ribu masa PRU hari tu, kalau ada di Cayman susah lah nak bagi cek.
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:23 PM | Show all posts
Edited by nirman at 5-7-2015 10:29 PM

Amid allegations that 1MDB funds had been channelled into his personal bank account, Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak has declared that he would not betray the Malaysian people.
http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/304130

http://www.kinitv.com/video/20342O8?utm_source=mkini&utm_medium=sidewidget&utm_campaign=ms
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:28 PM | Show all posts
Investigation papers submitted to the attorney-general by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) show that RM40 million a Sabah businessman was caught with in trying to smuggle into Malaysia from Hong Kong were political contributions to the state Umno and not for Chief Minister Musa Aman.

NONE“The funds were contributions to the Sabah Umno liaison body and not for the personal use of the chief minister,” Minister in The Prime Minister's Department Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz (right) states in a parliamentary written reply to Batu MP Chua Tian Chang, who is better known as Tian Chua.

In the same reply, Nazri also said that the MACC has concluded that "no element of corruption was proven" in the case

On Aug 14, 2008, the businessman, who has been identified as Michael Chia, was caught red-handed at the Hong Kong International Airport with Singapore currency worth the RM40 million in his luggage before be could board a flight to Kuala Lumpur.

Chia was charged with money laundering and trafficking by the Hong Kong Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).
Whistleblower website Sarawak Report has linked the monies to timber kickbacks which it said were bound for Musa's pockets for approving timber licences.

Musa has denied all the allegations.

Nazri's reply also states that the Hong Kong ICAC took no further action in the case after the MACC finding, while the request for cooperation in a criminal matter lodged over the Swiss bank account has been withdrawn for the same reason.

Speaking at a press conference in the Parliament lobby today, Tian Chua questioned the MACC finding that no graft was involved.

AG, MACC did not provide assistance sought

"Even if the money was not for Musa but for Sabah Umno, MACC still hasn't explained why no graft is involved. What is the money for and why is a businessman giving to money to Sabah Umno?"
Tian Chua (left) also claimed that the ICAC could not take further action because the attorney-general and MACC were dragging their feet in providing the assistance requested by the Hong Kong anti-graft body.

The request for cooperation on the matter of the Swiss bank accounts, he added, was still outstanding.

Nazri's reply appears different from the MACC statement that was issued to the press just last week.

NONEIn the statement, MACC said its investigations were concluded but that its operations evaluation panel had instructed that further evidence be collected against Sabah Chief Minister Musa Aman before the matter could proceed to prosecution.
According to MACC deputy chief commissioner (operations) Mohd Shukri Abdull, the matter was presented to the panel at its last sitting in May.

“The investigation against Musa is on corruption (not abuse of power) and we have completed the investigation, but the panel has instructed us to get more evidence,” Mohd Shukri had said.

VIDEO l 5.11 mins




musa aman pc in sabah 190608 01ICAC investigations also reportedly found that the money was earmarked for Musa and were part of more funds being deposited into a Swiss bank account containing US$30 million allegedly being held in trust for the Sabah chief minister by a lawyer.
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:28 PM | Show all posts
Zeti Akhtar senyap, Ambank senyap...yg terkontang kanting kata dia tak guna untuk peribadi hanyalah si Jibby sorang.

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Post time 5-7-2015 10:31 PM | Show all posts
TAXES 61
3 Jul 2015 | 1MDB
1. One of the greatest achievements of Malaysia is in the collection of taxes. Malaysians willingly pay taxes. They fear legal action being taken against them. They fear more the raids on their businesses and residences by the income tax authorities. I know this because I was raided when I was expelled from the party and was working as a medical practitioner.

2. They got hold of my cheque stubs and nothing I said would convince them that the money in my account was not all mine. In the end I had to pay more than twice what they claimed I had not declared.

3. The income tax people are always on the lookout for people who live beyond their means. They would raid these people and would force them to pay additional tax should they feel that the culprit had not paid up fully on their wealth.



4. But of late we see some selectivity in the focus of the income tax people.

5. For example the step son of the Prime Minister is reported to have spent hundreds of millions of USD or Ringgit buying luxury residences in London, New York and Hollywood. He also expended many millions to finance the production of the film “The Wolf of Wall Street”.

6. When the Prime Minister’s Office claimed it was inherited money the brothers of Najib protested. Their father was not rich and did not leave hundreds of millions of Ringgit to the family. Even Najib had to admit that Tun Razak did not have such money to leave to his family. So where did this money come from?

7. It was claimed that the money was from business. If he made so much money from business he would have paid income tax. Has the income tax people investigated him regarding his business profits. How much tax had he paid. It is a secret of course. But I hope it is not a cover-up.

8. Then there is Jho Low. He bought a bank for 260 million US dollars. Where did he get the money. Is it borrowed? Did he sell the bank and paid taxes on the profit.

9. He also bought luxury flats in New York and Hollywood. Where did the hundreds of millions he paid for all these come from? Has he paid tax on them?

10. I believe executives of 1MDB and its subsidiaries are paid high salaries. Have they paid taxes on their earnings?

11. I understand that the Prime Minister as adviser to 1MDB is not paid anything. He is paid the Prime Minister’s salary, which I know is far smaller than what business executives get. But the Government pays allowances, the electricity and water bills, transportation, home, etc. So the salary can all be saved and spent.

12. But still the lavish lifestyle must cost a packet. It must be more than what I saved after 29 years in the Government.

13. It is a secret of course. But I just want to ask, has the income tax people investigated the source of the money and the tax paid.

14. We talk about equality before the law. In this country even the rulers are subject to certain laws. It is the essence of justice. We must be equal before the laws and we must be seen to be equal. Everyone who should be investigated by Government agencies must be investigated. There should be no discrimination.

VERSI BM
CUKAI

1. Salah satu pencapaian terbesar Malaysia adalah dalam kutipan cukai. Rakyat Malaysia dengan rela hati membayar cukai. Mereka takut tindakan undang-undang diambil terhadap mereka. Mereka lebih takut lagi jika serbuan dibuat ke atas perniagaan dan kediaman mereka oleh pihak berkuasa cukai pendapatan. Saya tahu ini kerana saya diserbu apabila saya dipecat daripada parti dan bekerja sebagai seorang pengamal perubatan.

2. Mereka dapatkan potongan buku cek saya dan tiada apa yang saya katakan dapat meyakinkan mereka bahawa wang dalam akaun saya bukan semuanya milik saya. Akhirnya saya terpaksa membayar lebih daripada dua kali ganda apa yang mereka mendakwa saya tidak isytiharkan.

3. Orang-orang cukai pendapatan sentiasa mencari-cari orang-orang yang hidup di luar kemampuan mereka. Mereka akan membuat penyerbuan atas orang-orang ini dan akan memaksa mereka membayar cukai tambahan jika sekiranya mereka rasakan bahawa pelakunya tidak membayar penuh mengikut kekayaan mereka.

4. Tetapi akhir-akhir ini kita lihat sikap memilih dalam tumpuan orang-orang cukai pendapatan.

5. Sebagai contoh, anak tiri Perdana Menteri dilaporkan telah membelanjakan beratus-ratus juta USD atau Ringgit membeli kediaman mewah di London, New York dan Hollywood. Beliau juga membelanjakan berjuta-juta membiayai pengeluaran filem “The Wall Street Wolf”.

6. Apabila Pejabat Perdana Menteri mendakwa inilah wang yang diwarisi, saudara-saudara Najib membantah. Bapa mereka tidak kaya dan tidak meninggalkan beratus-ratus juta Ringgit untuk keluarga. Malah Najib terpaksa mengakui bahawa Tun Razak tidak mempunyai wang sebanyak itu yang ditinggalkan kepada keluarganya. Jadi dari manakah wang ini datang?

7. Adalah didakwa bahawa wang itu adalah daripada perniagaan. Jika dia telah membuat begitu banyak wang daripada perniagaan pasti beliau akan membayar cukai pendapatan. Sudahkah orang-orang cukai pendapatan siasat beliau mengenai keuntungan perniagaannya? Berapa banyak cukai telah dia bayar? Sudah tentuIah ini adalah rahsia. Tetapi saya berharap ini bukan satu penyelindungan (cover-up).

8. Kemudian ada pula Jho Low. Dia membeli sebuah bank dengan harga US$260 juta. Dari mana beliau dapat wang ini? Adakah ia dipinjam? Adakah dia telah menjual bank ini dan membayar cukai ke atas keuntungan.

9. Beliau juga telah membeli rumah-rumah pangsa mewah di New York dan Hollywood. Dari mana datangnya beratus-ratus juta wang yang diguna untuk membayar semua ini? Adakah dia telah membayar cukai atas mereka?

10. Saya percaya eksekutif-eksekutif 1MDB dan anak-anak syarikatnya dibayar gaji yang tinggi. Ada mereka membayar cukai ke atas pendapatan mereka?

11. Saya difaham bahawa Perdana Menteri, sebagai penasihat kepada 1MDB, tidak dibayar apa-apa. Dia dibayar gaji Perdana Menteri, yang saya tahu adalah jauh lebih kecil daripada apa yang eksekutif perniagaan dapat. Tetapi Kerajaan membayar elaun-elaun, bil elektrik dan air, pengangkutan, tempat tinggal dan lain-lain. Oleh itu, gaji semua boleh disimpan dan dibelanjakan.

12. Masih, gaya hidup yang mewah pasti melibatkan kos yang tinggi. Pasti lebih daripada apa yang saya simpan selepas 29 tahun di dalam Kerajaan.

13. Sudah tentu ini adalah rahsia. Tetapi saya ingin bertanya, sudahkah orang-orang cukai pendapatan menyiasat sumber wang dan cukai yang dibayar?

14. Kita bercakap mengenai kesamarataan di sisi undang-undang. Di negara ini raja-raja pun tertakluk kepada undang-undang tertentu. Ia adalah intipati keadilan. Kita mesti sama rata di sisi undang-undang dan kita perlu dilihat sama rata. Setiap orang yang perlu disiasat oleh agensi-agensi Kerajaan mesti disiasat. Tidak boleh ada diskriminasi.

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Post time 5-7-2015 10:31 PM | Show all posts
copy paste chede.cc
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Post time 5-7-2015 10:39 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
tu laaa dulu tun m dah ty elok2 gi konar sana sini..org tua tu ty simple je mana ilang duit 1mdb..tp dipitnahnya kata org tua tu ada hidden agenda..skg hadap laa ko
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