Wednesday 24 Apr 2024
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It is bad enough that 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) has not been very transparent in keeping the public informed of its operations, but what is worse is that when it does say something, it always does not address the questions at hand.

President and group executive director Arul Kanda Kandasamy’s media statement yesterday morning about an article published by The Edge weekly on Saturday is a good example.

Arul’s statement said that 1MDB’s board of directors “categorically denies that it had ever approved any action or series of actions to transfer funds from the company to any third party other than the intended beneficiaries”.

He was referring to The Edge weekly’s article titled “How Jho Low used US$260 million of 1MDB’s cash to buy UBG in 2010”.

Nowhere in the article, which was based on documents and email trails, did The Edge say that the board of 1MDB had approved of any transfers of cash to any unintended third party.

What the article did say, was that two 1MDB executives Casey Tang and Nik Faisal Ariff Kamil, had worked with Low Taek Jho or Jho Low and top executives of PetroSaudi International Ltd to get 1MDB to subscribe to US$500 million of Murabahah notes, and that US$260 million was subsequently channelled to Jho Low’s Javace Sdn Bhd to buy UBG Bhd. This was based on bank transfers documents sighted by The Edge.

The article asked whether 1MDB’s board was aware of this fact, and that its two executives, especially chief investment officer Nik Faisal, was actively working with PetroSaudi and Jho Low in the UBG takeover.

But these questions were not answered by Arul in his media statement on behalf of the board. Instead, he denied something we never accused the board of.

We repeat our questions:

i) Was the board aware that Casey Tang and Nik Faisal had helped raised cash from 1MDB to enable Jho Low to take over UBG (as proven by the emails)? Why were they helping Jho Low and PetroSaudi since 1MDB was not involved in the takeover of UBG? Does the board approve of what they did? Will the board haul up Casey Tang and Nik Faisal to explain?

ii) Was the board aware that US$260 million of the US$500 million in Murabahah notes that it subscribed to in 2010 was channelled to Javace for its general offer of UBG?

iii) Did the use of the US$260 million for the UBG takeover comply with the approval given by Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) to remit the US$500 million out of the country?

iv) Doesn’t the board of directors of 1MDB have a fiduciary duty to ensure that the conditions set by BNM are complied with, specifically that the money remitted out is used for the intended purpose as approved? Doesn’t the board have a duty to ensure that 1MDB staff work in the interest of the company and not for outsiders?

Arul, can you get your board of directors to answer these questions?

 

This article first appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, on June 9, 2015.

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