Malaysian agency: Money in Najib’s accounts came from donors

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Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia — Malaysia’s anti-corruption agency said Monday that $700 million in Prime Minister Najib Razak’s personal bank accounts came from donations, not from a debt-ridden state investment fund.

 

The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission effectively cleared Najib of any criminal wrongdoing. In early July, The Wall Street Journal reported that the money came into Najib’s accounts from entities linked to the 1MDB state investment fund.

In this Wednesday, July 8, 2015 file picture t Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak speaks during Perdana Fellowship Programme in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak is not known to be a risk-taker, but he made his biggest political gamble to stay in power last week as he got rid of critics in his Cabinet, sacked the attorney-general probing him and stalled investigations over leaked confidential documents that allegedly show some $700 million was siphoned out from a troubled state fund into his personal accounts. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian/FILE)In this Wednesday, July 8, 2015 file picture t Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak speaks during Perdana Fellowship Programme in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak is not known to be a risk-taker, but he made his biggest political gamble to stay in power last week as he got rid of critics in his Cabinet, sacked the attorney-general probing him and stalled investigations over leaked confidential documents that allegedly show some $700 million was siphoned out from a troubled state fund into his personal accounts. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian/FILE)

The commission said in a statement that its investigation showed the money was “contributions from donors, and not funds from 1MDB”and that it had referred its findings to the attorney-general. It did not identify the donors or say how the money was spent.

Najib has come under immense pressure over 1MDB, which has accumulated 42 billion ringgit ($10.9 billion) in debt. The fund was set up by Najib in 2009 to develop new industries but its energy ventures abroad faltered. Critics have voiced concerns about 1MDB’s massive debt and lack of transparency.

Last month, then-Attorney General Abdul Gani Patail confirmed receiving documents from investigators that linked Najib to 1MDB fund. The documents could pave the way for possible criminal charges and have embroiled Najib in the biggest crisis of his political career.

The government last week abruptly terminated Gani’s services, three months short of his retirement. Najib has also axed his deputy Muhyiddin Yassin, a vocal critic, and four other ministers in a surprise Cabinet reshuffle.

Critics however, were skeptical of the timing of the anti-graft agency’s statement and urged the agency to reveal the donors. Some also noted that Najib has not taken legal action against Wall Street Journal.

“In my view, the statement by MACC still causes me concern as it means whoever donated such large sums is likely to expect benefit,” said lawyer Ambiga Sreenevasan, who heads the National Human Rights Society.

Before the anti-graft statement, opposition lawmaker Rafizi Ramli earlier Tuesday predicted that Najib would claim that the money came from donations from rich individuals in the Middle East, which would halt investigations into the money in his account.

However, he said it has failed to answer the questions on 1MDB’s massive debt and why the money trail showed links to 1MDB.