Bank Negara urges criminal prosecution of 1MDB

Bank Negara Malaysia today said it had urged the attorney-general (A-G) to begin criminal prosecution of troubled state fund 1MDB after completing its investigation, piling more pressure on Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak who chairs the fund's advisory board. At the centre of a political crisis over its debt of nearly RM42 billion and alleged financial graft, 1MDB is the subject of several probes by different authorities, including Bank Negara. The statement comes just one day after the A-G said it had seen a report of the central bank's investigation and concluded that 1MDB officials had not committed any offence. The A-G Tan Sri Mohamed Apandi Ali, appointed by the prime minister in late July, also said it had rejected a central bank request for a review of the decision. In its statement, the central bank also said 1MDB had secured permits for investment abroad based on inaccurate or incomplete disclosure of information, thus breaching domestic regulations. The central bank added it revoked three permits granted to 1MDB for investments abroad totalling US$1.83 billion (RM7.53 billion) and ordered the state fund to repatriate the funds to Malaysia. 1MDB did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The A-G's Chambers declined to comment. In July, The Wall Street Journal reported that investigators looking into 1MDB had identified a payment of nearly US$700 million into a bank account under Najib's name. Najib has denied taking money for personal gain. The central bank did not specify which permits were revoked or where it believed the US$1.83 billion was being held. Earlier this year, 1MDB said it redeemed US$1.1 billion from the Cayman Islands and parked it in BSI Bank Limited Singapore, a local unit of Swiss asset manager BSI. – Reuters, October 9, 2015.