Friday 29 Mar 2024
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KUALA LUMPUR: The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) has unanimously agreed to question those involved in the set-up, management and regulation of 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB), the government-owned strategic investor which has racked up debts totalling RM42 billion since 2009 and is now under probe by the Auditor-General (AG).

The Malaysian Insider learnt that PAC will start its hearings after May 18 when the next Dewan Rakyat parliamentary session resumes. The hearing will continue from the last hearing on the matter in 2012.

“The PAC agreed unanimously last week to call in those involved with 1MDB while it waits for the Auditor-General’s report.

“It will start with Ministry of Finance officials who helped set up 1MDB, followed by 1MDB executives, the company’s board, and the auditors,” a source told The Malaysian Insider.

Another source confirmed the probe, adding that letters will be issued to those involved in the issue to present themselves for the hearing.

“The letters will be issued on Tuesday [today]. There is a possibility that Bank Negara [Malaysia] officials may have to testify over their responsibilities in the company,” the second source said.

“As it is, there does not seem to be any government rep[resentative] in the 1MDB board. That is a cause of concern,” he added.

PAC and Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak ordered the AG in March to investigate 1MDB over reports of profligacy and inability to pay debts despite a RM51 billion asset base.

The AG has not given a time frame to conduct an audit, but promised to initiate one as quickly as possible.

PAC chairman Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed had said then that the AG must focus on “five crucial points”, including 1MDB’s source of RM2 billion funding to settle its loans with several local banks, the PetroSaudi International Ltd deal, the Finance Ministry’s injection of RM3 billion into the sovereign fund, proceeds of 1MDB’s investment in the Cayman Islands channelled back into the country, and reasons behind the change in the international auditing firm to approve the sovereign fund’s accounts.

“The Auditor-General must address these points. They are crucial issues which need answers as they relate to 1MDB’s dealings,” he was quoted as saying then.

1MDB had chiefly invested in property and power plants across Asia but now faces a cash crunch as concerns about its cash flow arise. — The Malaysian Insider

 

This article first appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, on May 5, 2015.

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