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Author: atira

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

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Post time 6-7-2015 09:39 AM | Show all posts
atira replied at 5-7-2015 04:08 PM
Nazri: I will tell Najib not to sue WSJ
PETALING JAYA: Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz wants the Prime Minist ...

wahhhhhh.... dah jadi budak surohan nazri pulok iyeee, jib?
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Post time 6-7-2015 09:40 AM | Show all posts
Tunggu Selasa ni yeee.....

Najib akan fail saman terhadap WSJ Selasa ini
Astro Awani | Kemas kini: Julai 05, 2015

KUALA LUMPUR: Datuk Seri Najib Razak akan memfailkan saman terhadap Wall Street Journal (WSJ) pada Selasa berhubung laporan mengaitkan beliau dalam dakwaan penyelewengan wang berjumlah RM2.6 bilion, lapor portal berita The Star Online.

Portal itu memetik sumber yang rapat dengan Perdana Menteri bahawa Najib akan membuat pengumuman menangani perkara berkenaan dalam satu majlis di Semenyih petang ini.

"Beliau akan memfailkan saman itu melalui peguamnya di Kuala Lumpur," sumber itu dipetik sebagai berkata.

Perdana Menteri dijadualkan mengadakan sidang media di Masjid Bandar Rinching, Semenyih pada pukul 6.15 petang nanti.

Jumaat lalu, WSJ menyiarkan laporan yang mendakwa dana hampir AS$700 juta (RM2.6 bilion) milik 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) disalurkan ke dalam akaun peribadi Perdana Menteri sebelum Pilihan Raya Umum Ke-13 (PRU-13).

Dalam kenyataan menjawab tuduhan tersebut, 1MDB menafikan dan menegaskan tidak ada dana dipindah ke dalam akaun peribadi Najib.

Najib juga dalam kenyataan di laman Facebooknya menafikan dakwaan tersebut dan mendakwa mantan perdana menteri, Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad bekerjasama dengan pihak asing untuk menjatuhkan beliau.

Setiausaha politik Najib, Datuk Khairun Aseh dalam kenyataannya kepada Sinar Harian pada Sabtu menegaskan laporan itu merupakan satu fitnah jahat.
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Post time 6-7-2015 09:43 AM | Show all posts
kecimpret replied at 5-7-2015 10:39 PM
tu laaa dulu tun m dah ty elok2 gi konar sana sini..org tua tu ty simple je mana ilang duit 1mdb..tp ...

YES, I agree with u.
Kalau awal-awal Najib dah OPEN about 1MDB, dia takkan berada
dalam keadaan sekarang - tersepit celah kelengkang..........HAHAHA.
Ni takda, orang tua tu tanya stret question, dia buat orang tua tu musuh.
Dia gali lubang, buru-burukkan orang tua tu, trying to blacklist him.
Sampaikan PROTON pun jadi mangsa hinaaan.
Dituduhnya orang tua tu marah sebab dia tak maw buat jambatan bengkok.
Padahal it was just a simple question.
Give a simple answer - jangan  cakap tunggu siastan itu dan ini.
Sungguh berbeza antara Pahlawan Bugis dengan mamak dalam
menangani masalah. Kalau Tun  Det, he will EXPLAIN and EXPLAIN
sampai sume orang BOHSAN.............
Tapi Najib pulak, sumenya RAHSIA.
Apakah ini LIM KOK WENG punya idea to build his image......????
Sorry Mr.Lim your counter attack has gone HiWire.........

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Post time 6-7-2015 10:21 AM | Show all posts
atuk Seri Nazir Razak, the brother of embattled Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, made an impassioned plea on his Instagram account, urging for the interests of the country and its people to be prioritised in the current political situation.

While not naming anyone,the CIMB chairman is commenting at a time the country's leaders, including Najib, are embroiled in scandals surrounding government-owned investment firm 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB).

"They gave their lives so we could build a nation. In this darkest hour of political times we must remember to place the country & the rakyat first.


"Not personal interests, not personal loyalties, not even party politics," Nazir's post read, along with a picture of the National Monument which commemorates fallen soldiers and Malaysians who lost their lives in the country's struggle to gain freedom.
Nazir recently made headlines when a report claimed that he was in the midst of setting up a new political party with Umno's Datuk Saifuddin Abdullah but he later denied this, saying that it would be a non-governmental organisation instead.

The prominent banker has been vocal on current issues, once calling on the 1MDB board to resign if they did not want to take proactive measures to address concerns over its finances.

1MDB, which has debts of RM42 billion, is owned by the Finance Ministry and has loans which are backed by letters of support from Putrajaya. Najib is also finance minister and chairman of 1MDB's advisory board.

Previously, Nazir had also taken 1MDB top executives to task for failing to attend an inquiry hearing by Parliament's Public Accounts Committee (PAC).

"Your company has triggered a national crisis and you can be too busy to face Parliament? Unacceptable," he had posted on his Instagram account last month after 1MDB group executive director Arul Kanda Kandasamy and former 1MDB CEO Datuk Shahrol Azral Ibrahim Halmi did not attend a scheduled PAC hearing and asked for a later date.

Last month, Nazir had also taken to his Instagram account to question why Putrajaya was being slow in auditing 1MDB's accounts for the year ending March 2015.

"I am perplexed why your March 2015 audit has not even started? How is this allowed? Has standards of GLC governance dropped so low? – July 6, 2015.

- See more at: http://www.themalaysianinsider.c ... thash.I2zfwM5v.dpuf
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Post time 6-7-2015 10:21 AM | Show all posts
chaintea replied at 5-7-2015 11:57 AM
dr petang td, baru 20 pages...alaaaa where's the fun?

puasa noks... activiti hencapan slow sket
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Post time 6-7-2015 10:23 AM | Show all posts
s the taxman ever paid a visit to Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak?

That's the question posed by former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who wants to know how much the Inland Revenue Board has collected from Najib.

"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 culprits have not paid up fully on their wealth.

"But of late, we see some selectivity in the focus of the income tax people," Mahathir (photo) wrote in his blog today.

He said Najib's wealth has been attributed to business interests, which meant the prime minister would have to pay additional income taxes

"If he made so much money from business, he should have paid income tax. Have the income tax people investigated him regarding his business profits?

"How much tax has he paid? It is a secret of course. But I hope it is not a cover-up," Mahathir added.

How about Riza Aziz and Jho Low?

Mahathir said others who might have escaped the Inland Revenue Board's scrutiny include Najib's stepson Riza Aziz (photo), and 1MDB-linked business tycoon Jho Low.

"(Riza) is reported to have spent hundreds of millions of US dollars 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'.

"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.

"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?

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

He was referring to Riza's alleged purchase of homes in the US and England, including a RM110 million apartment in New York.

Low (photo), whose real name is Low Taek Jho, meanwhile, is alleged to have used 1MDB funds to buy out UBG bank.

Mahathir's comments come as reports emerge claiming that almost US$700 million was deposited in Najib's personal bank accounts.
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Post time 6-7-2015 10:33 AM | Show all posts
Umno owned daily Utusan Malaysia has once again claimed that Malaysiakini is working hand in hand with foreigners to topple the country’s “Islamic leadership”.

In their weekend edition’s regular editorial under the pseudonym Awang Selamat, the Malay daily accused Malaysiakini of “taking advantage” of the recent 1MDB-related allegations made against Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak by sensationalising “negative” readers’ reactions with “pornographic” enthusiasm.

"After failing to topple the government in the last general election, this is the opportunity to smear the country's leadership.

“All negative readers’ comments were played sensationally, akin to watching pornography, while the positive reactions are banned," read the column today.

"It is not surprising that the portal is aggressively threatening the existing Islam-led government," said Awang, a collective pen name for Utusan’s senior editors.

“They are holding up Wall Street Journal (WSJ) as though they are sharing the same agenda,” said the writer, adding Malaysiakini’s credibility was too low for it to be believed.

On Friday, Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported that Malaysian investigators have allegedly traced nearly US$700 million in deposits into what they believe are Najib's personal bank accounts.

WSJ cited documents from a government probe into the 1MDB scandal, which both the international financial newspaper and whistleblower website Sarawak Report claim they had obtained.

Najib yesterday denied the allegations as an attempt to topple a democratically elected prime minister, accusing his predecessor Dr Mahathir Mohammad of collaborating with “foreign media” to do so.

Jumping on the bandwagon, Federal Territories Umno youth chief Razlan Rafii in a statement yesterday claimed the attacks are being orchestrated by Jews to topple Malaysia’s Islamic leadership.

Playing the same tune, Awang hinted Malaysiakini along with Sarawak Report were directed by "foreign influence" and guided by "hidden hands".
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Post time 6-7-2015 10:35 AM | Show all posts
US$700 million allegedly went into a prime minister’s private account. That was indeed news, a scoop, and WSJ reported it. It is not often that kind of thing happens and therefore is worthy of news, internationally. However, closer to home, what's new? Bankrupt of argument, Utusan once again plays the religious card. You mean stealing from the people is acceptable? A bunch of crap writers from Utusan who shamelessly call themselves journalists.
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:01 AM | Show all posts
Saman jgn tak saman...btw saman pakai duit sendiri o rakyat. Mesti duit rakyat kan bertambahlah hutang negara gara2 nak klearkan nama pemimpin teragung pujaan macai. Hebat pembangkang sampai leh bersekongkol dgn WSJ ek. Malaysia ni negara terhebat kat abad ni kew sampai pemimpin nya difitnah? Sudah2 bijan oiii.
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:03 AM | Show all posts
Majlis Profesor gesa sekat laman Wall Street Journal

Published: 6 July 2015 10:28 AM
http://www.themalaysianinsider.c ... wall-street-journal

Majlis Profesor Negara (MPN) menggesa Datuk Seri Najib Razak memfailkan injunksi bagi menghalang Wall Street Journal (WSJ) daripada terus menyiarkan artikel mengaitkannya dengan dakwaan pemindahan wang RM2.6 bilion dari 1Malaysia Develoment Berhad (1MDB) ke dalam akaun peribadi beliau.

Saranan itu dibuat Ketua Kluster Pentadbiran, Perundangan dan Pengurusan Awam MPN, Profesor Dr Nik Ahmad Kamal Nik Mahmood yang berpendapat penyiaran artikel itu mencemarkan nama Najib dan pentadbiran negara.

"Najib perlu bertindak segera dengan mengemukakan saman dan permohonan injunksi mengarahkan penerbit tidak menerbitkan apa jua fitnah lagi terhadapnya," katanya memetik Sinar Harian, hari ini.

Beliau juga mencadangkan agar injunksi itu difailkan di tempat pejabat WSJ beroperasi.
"Pelaksanaan injunksi boleh berlaku serta merta. Tetapi apabila injunksi dimohon di mahkamah di Malaysia, ia agak sukar hendak dikuatkuasakan di tempat penerbitan akhbar tersebut," katanya.

Akhbar sama turut melaporkan Nik Ahmad Kamal mencadangkan Suruhanjaya Komunikasi dan Multimedia Malaysia (SKMM) agar menyekat laman WSJ daripada diakses.

Pada Jumaat, WSJ dan laman web pemberi maklumat Sarawak Report melaporkan, siasatan ke atas syarikat sarat hutang 1MDB itu mendapati berbilion ringgit dimasukkan ke akaun peribadi Najib.

Memetik dokumen siasatan 1MDB yang dijalankan kerajaan Malaysia, WSJ melaporkan, wujud dokumen menunjukkan AS$700 juta (RM2.67 bilion) dipindahkan ke agensi kerajaan, bank dan entiti berkaitan 1MDB dan akhirnya ke akaun peribadi perdana menteri dalam 5 deposit berasingan.

Ia berkata, urus niaga terbesar melibatkan deposit sebanyak AS$620 juta dan satu lagi AS$61 juta pada Mac 2013, dua bulan sebelum pilihan raya umum diadakan.

Bagaimanapun, Putrajaya menafikan laporan itu, mengatakan Najib tidak pernah menggunakan sebarang dana awam. – 6 Julai, 2015.
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:09 AM | Show all posts
KUALA LUMPUR: Even if Attorney-General Gani Patail finds that there is no sufficient evidence to prosecute Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, in the wake of allegations against him in The Wall Street Journal, “there’s a very strong sense that he has been weakened nevertheless”, according to Forbes in an op-ed piece.
“Malaysia is a place where reputation matters enormously and where bad press sticks.”
Gani Patail, it noted, disclosed last week that he feels that there is potential for the allegations to lead to criminal charges against Najib if the documents that he had received on them turn out to be accurate. “1MDB, which the Prime Minister chairs as the Advisor, was already a political embarrassment to him after having run up debts of USD11.6 billion. Now, it’s the subject of probes by four agencies.”
The allegations, added the US publication, has come at a very bad time for the Prime Minister even if it isn’t proven. “If it is proven that the funds did indeed go into an account bearing his name, it’s difficult to see how Najib can survive.”
“He’s facing the greatest challenge of his leadership since 2009 and even the risk of criminal charges.”
The publication was commenting on the WSJ report that Najib received nearly USD700 million of transfers originating from 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), banked into his personal bank accounts, “much of it during an election campaign”.
Umno, which Najib heads, was already in a period of internal turmoil, continues the US publication, as it recognises that it no longer has an automatic right to expect to win every election. “The party wonders whether Najib is the right person to lead it in this newly-competitive political environment.”
“Malaysia’s economy is struggling too, particularly in an era of falling commodity prices, at a time when the country is one of the few in Asia to be a net exporter of commodities.”
The op-ed noted that former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, something of a mentor to Najib, has turned against him and has called on him to step down over 1MDB and even beforehand was angry with him. “Najib himself has referred to the allegations in the WSJ as political sabotage and has blamed Mahathir as orchestrating them.”
The comment piece discloses that Forbes will publish an interview with Mahathir later this week. The interview, conducted earlier this year, was on Mahathir’s thoughts on Najib “which have not been positive for some time”.
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:10 AM | Show all posts
It will be interesting to read Dr M's interview with Forbes!
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:23 AM | Show all posts
KUALA LUMPUR: Two of Malaysia’s main opposition parties on Sunday demanded an emergency sitting of parliament to discuss Prime Minister Najib Razak’s future as tensions mounted over a report that linked him to probes into alleged corruption involving state fund 1MDB.
A Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report published on Friday said investigators had traced nearly $700 million to bank accounts they believed belonged to the prime minister.
Reuters could not independently verify the report.
Najib has denied taking any money from the debt-laden state fund or any other entity for personal gain, and on Sunday said he had referred “wild allegations” against him to lawyers and would decide any legal steps in a few days.
“If I wanted to steal, it wouldn’t make sense that I would place that money into accounts in Malaysia,” he told reporters. “Surely as a prime minister I would not betray Malaysians and property that belongs to Malaysians. This is my promise.”
The Wall Street Journal declined to comment on Najib’s latest statement.
Pressure mounted on Najib on Saturday after the country’s attorney-general said he had received documents from a task force investigating 1MDB that were “connected to allegations” that money was transferred into the prime minister’s account.
“With the attorney-general’s confirmation, the WSJ allegation against Najib has assumed an even more serious character and import, sparking a political and government crisis of the first magnitude never seen in Malaysia’s 58-year history,” Lim Kit Siang, the opposition Democratic Action Party’s (DAP) parliamentary leader, said in a statement.
Members of Najib’s party, the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), have closed ranks behind the prime minister, who had already been on a back foot over the mismanagement of 1MDB and his handling of the economy.
However, the DAP and opposition People’s Justice Party (PKR) sought to stoke the furore, urging the speaker of parliament’s lower house to call an emergency sitting on Tuesday.
DAP lawmaker Charles Santiago said he and 72 others, including representatives of political parties and non-governmental organisations, had also lodged a police report.
“We have asked that the police investigate the WSJ’s assertion that billions were deposited in Najib’s personal account and take necessary actions,” he told Reuters.
“Tarnishing the country’s image”
1MDB, whose advisory board is chaired by Najib, has debt of nearly $11.6 billion. Even before the WSJ report it was the subject of separate investigations by the central bank, auditor general, police and the parliament’s Public Accounts Committee.
Attorney-General Abdul Gani Patail said on Saturday that a task force made up of members of the anti-corruption commission, police and central bank had raided offices of three companies linked to the state investor.
The Wall Street Journal, citing documents from a government investigation, said there were five deposits into Najib’s account. It said the two largest transactions, worth $620 million and $61 million, were made in 2013 from a company registered in the British Virgin Islands via a Swiss bank.
1MDB has described the allegations as “unsubstantiated”, saying it never provided funds to the prime minister.
Najib has accused former premier Mahathir Mohamad, an ally-turned-critic, of fanning allegations he described as a lie.
Najib, himself the son of a prime minister and now in his second term, retains support within the long-ruling Barisan Nasional coalition.
His home (interior) minister, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, said on Sunday those behind the allegations appeared to be trying to undermine confidence in Malaysia’s economy and government, and their actions could be “a threat to national security”, the Bernama state news agency reported
“The home ministry will take action against any media that publish inaccurate information from unknown sources for the purpose of tarnishing the country’s and government’s image,” his ministry said in a statement late on Saturday.
- Reuters
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:26 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Habisla assistant pasang kasut kak mah lepas ni kena resign cari kerja yg mulia sikit
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:28 AM | Show all posts
belilies replied at 3-7-2015 11:52 AM
Bukan stakat Sarawak Report... WSJ pun melaporkan benda yang sama niii... arghhh! kang kene bambu  ...

justo mana justo..hehe kalau boleh kait dgn justo......leh close case dah ni
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:29 AM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
Xsaba nak tggu selasa ni
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:31 AM | Show all posts
bank statement mane bank statement???
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:37 AM | Show all posts
Difficult for Najib to survive 1MDB scandal even if cleared, says Forbes

Published: 6 July 2015 11:15 AM
http://www.themalaysianinsider.c ... cleared-says-forbes


Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak is fending off the latest criticism over the 1MDB scandal but it could be too much to handle for his party and its supporters. – The Malaysian Insider pic by Nazir Sufari, July 6, 2015.

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak will find it difficult to survive the latest scandal involving debt-ridden state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) whether or not it is proven that US$700 billion (RM2.67 billion) did go into his personal account, business magazine Forbes said.

An opinion piece "Can Najib Razak Survive 1MDB Scandal?" said even if the allegations turned out to be untrue, they had come at a difficult time for Najib.

This was due to other factors, such as Umno's internal turmoil as it grappled with the reality that it no longer had an "automatic right" to win every election, causing the party to become unsure if Najib was the right person to lead the lynchpin party of the ruling coalition in a more competitive political environment.

Forbes also noted that Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail had confirmed receiving documents linking Najib to 1MDB and was reported to have felt there was potential for it to lead to criminal charges being filed if the allegations were accurate.

"Najib Razak, Malaysia’s prime minister since 2009, is facing the greatest challenge of his leadership – and even the risk of criminal charges," the article said. – July 6, 2015.
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:41 AM | Show all posts
Bank Negara, AmBank must respond to allegations of billions in Najib’s accounts, say Umno MPs

Published: 6 July 2015 10:44 AM
http://www.themalaysianinsider.c ... ns-in-najibs-accoun


Bank Negara Malaysia is well-regarded internationally but its reputation is now clouded in the outcome of allegations made against Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak and the alleged transfer of US$700 million into bank accounts in his name, in the country. – The Malaysian Insider file pic, July 6, 2015.

Two Umno lawmakers want Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and AmBank to clarify the allegations made by the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) against Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, Singapore's Straits Times reported.

Titiwangsa MP Datuk Johari Abdul Ghani in Kuala Lumpur, and Penang's Kepala Batas MP Datuk Seri Reezal Merican Naina Merican, both expressed the need for the central bank and the private bank where allegedly Najib has his accounts, to make an official statement on the serious allegations.

Johari was quoted as saying, "If the two banks remain silent, it will not reduce public perception (of wrongdoing)."

Meanwhile, in a statement yesterday, Reezal said, "There has been no clear statement from Bank Negara Malaysia or even AmBank... and this brings about confusion among the public."
The WSJ and whistle-blower site Sarawak Report reported on Friday that investigations into debt-ridden 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) have allegedly uncovered billions of ringgit channelled to the personal accounts of Najib.

In their reports, both WSJ and the Sarawak Report had quoted from documents from the 1MDB probe by the Malaysian government, with Sarawak Report claiming that the Attorney-General was also aware of the information.

The documents allegedly showed US$700 million (RM2.67 billion) was moved among government agencies, banks and entities linked to 1MDB, which finally ended in the prime minister's personal accounts at the AmPrivate Bank in Kuala Lumpur, in five separate deposits.

According to Straits Times, BNM is well-regarded in international banking circles, and would normally be alerted to large transfers in domestic accounts, especially ones such as the alleged deposit of US$620 million transferred from a Singapore-based Swiss bank in March 2013.

Other Umno leaders also stepped into the fray admitting that Najib's response to the allegations, only saying that no money was used for "personal gain", did not address the main issue, that is if the money had indeed entered his accounts.

Bank Negara had reportedly said on June 3 that it would begin a formal inquiry into 1MDB but was bound by its operating procedure not to disclose any details as that would undermine the probe.

Meanwhile, 1MDB made an official statement last Friday denying that it had tranferred any funds to the prime minister, who is also chairman of the government investment fund's advisory board.

Independent think tank Ideas' chief executive officer Wan Saiful Wan Jan told the Straits Times that he believes the timing of the latest allegations against Najib is disastrous with government institutions under pressure to show they are independent.

With Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail leading a multi-agency task force to look into the allegations, Wan Saiful was quoted as saying: "If the allegations are proven, it would be the first time a PM is charged and he would be in grave trouble.

"However, if he is not (charged), large segments would point to previous occasions when (the Attorney-General's) neutrality was in doubt." – July 6, 2015.
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Post time 6-7-2015 11:44 AM | Show all posts
apa lah susah sangat Najib ni.. Jawab Yes/ No.. minta bank negara dan AMbank jelaskan.. settle..
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