Malaysia PM claims party’s support despite mounting scandal

Agence France-Presse

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Malaysia PM claims party’s support despite mounting scandal

SHAMSHAHRIN SHAMSUDIN

Pressure on Najib Razak mounts over allegations of fraud and embezzlement at a debt-ridden, state-owned investment company that he launched and still oversees

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia – Malaysia’s embattled prime minister said his party’s ruling council gave him its “undivided support” at a meeting on Monday, May 11, amid intensifying speculation over his future in the wake of a financial scandal.

The comments by Najib Razak followed a weekend in which pressure on him mounted over allegations of fraud and embezzlement at a debt-ridden, state-owned investment company that he launched and still oversees.

Influential former premier Mahathir Mohamad has waged a months-long campaign for Najib to step aside over the matter, saying it could eventually result in the long-ruling United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) being ousted in future elections.

But some of Najib’s own cabinet ministers over the weekend began echoing the calls for a thorough probe into the scandal-tainted company, 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB).

“The UMNO Supreme Council gave their undivided support for the party president and deputy,” Najib, who is UMNO president, said during a brief press conference following the council’s meeting in Kuala Lumpur.

He said the Supreme Council called for the ruling establishment to be “united in resolving any crisis” but added that council members wanted a probe by the auditor-general into 1MDB, which was ordered by Najib in March, to be “sped up.”

Najib’s reputation has been hammered this year by a drip-feed of damaging allegations concerning 1MDB.

These include accusations that at least $700 million has gone missing in murky overseas financial transactions that critics say have never been fully explained, either by 1MDB or Najib.

Najib denies any wrongdoing.

1MDB has reportedly run up a massive $11 billion in debt, largely to finance the acquisition of power-industry assets.

It is now believed to be struggling to pay that off, prompting fears that it could default on loans and collapse, rattling the financial system and UMNO’s ruling coalition.

Reports of the allegedly lavish lifestyle enjoyed by Najib’s family have also stoked public anger.

Najib has vowed there will be no government bailout of 1MDB.

But it was revealed last week that a fund which helps people in the Muslim-majority country to finance trips to Mecca had bought land from 1MDB at prices far above what 1MDB originally paid. 

The news has offended Muslims and added to suspicions that a bailout was in the works.

Adding to the pressure, the head of a parliamentary committee that monitors public spending said Monday it would launch an investigation into 1MDB starting next week, despite earlier saying it would await the auditor-general’s report.

A coalition dominated by UMNO has ruled since independence in 1957. But in the 2013 general election, while securing a greater number of seats, it lost the popular vote for the first time to an opposition promising an end to authoritarianism and corruption. – Rappler.com

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