Swiss state
prosecutors have begun criminal proceedings against executives from Malaysia's
embattled 1MDB development fund, on top of freezing its assets. The
organization has however denied having its resources frozen.
Deutsche Welle, 3 Sep 2015
Despite
denials from Malaysian authorities, Switzerland confirmed on Thursday that it
had frozen tens of millions of dollars in assets from 1Malaysia Development
Berhad (1MDB), the country's troubled state investment fund. According to the
Swiss state prosecutor, a criminal probe was also opened against two executives
working for 1MDB.
"The
Office of The Attorney General of Switzerland (OAG) has frozen assets amounting
several tens of millions of US-dollars on Swiss bank accounts,"
spokeswoman Anna Wegelin told French news agency AFP. She added that the
criminal proceedings now underway involved money laundering and "suspected
misconduct in public office."
The move
follows months of allegations that huge sums of money had disappeared during
deals with 1 MDB and increasing anger at Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak,
who launched the fund in 2009.
The fund,
however, said it knew nothing about the Swiss claims, despite insistence from
Bern that they had been in contact with Kuala Lumpur: "As far as 1MDB is
aware, none of the company's bank accounts have been frozen."
The 1MDB
statement continued, however, that it is in the process of developing a better
understanding of the ongoing investigations in Switzerland so the company can
cooperate to its fullest extent."
Prime
Minister Razak has unequivocally denied any wrongdoing, even as tens of
thousands of protestors have taken to the streets of Kuala Lumpur and other
Malaysian cities in the past week, including former Prime Minister Mahathir
Mohamad, calling on their leader to come clean about 1MDB's activities.
The fund
has been in the international spotlight since a July "Wall Street
Journal" report implied that 2.6 billion ringgit (613 million dollars)
discovered in Razak's bank accounts had come from the heavily indebted
organization.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.