Perkara itu dimaklumkan Pengarah Strategi Keadilan, Rafizi Ramli dalam twitternya pagi tadi.
Menurutnya, beliau bersama rombongan yang disertai beberapa wakil rakyat Malaysia itu akan membekalkan maklumat baru berhubung skandal tersebut.
“Pagi ini, saya bersama Leong Jee Keen, Hee Loy Sian, Chang Lih Kang akan buat laporan baru dan beri maklumat baru kepada ICAC agar kes RM40 juta disiasat semula,” katanya.
“Ahli-ahli Majlis Perundangan Hong Kong akan desak ICAC siasat rasuah RM40 juta,” jelas beliau.
“Saya juga menyambut baik kenyataan Ketua Pendakwaraya Hong Kong bahawa beliau sudi untuk membuka semula kes ini jika ada bukti baru.
“Keadilan akan menumpukan sepenuh perhatian untuk mengumpulkan bukti-bukti baru ini agar satu siasatan dapat dimulakan segera oleh ICAC,” katanya lagi dalam kenyataan dari Hong Kong.
Rafizi bersama rombongan berlepas ke negara itu semalam untuk memulakan proses permohonan membuka siasatan kes itu.
Mengikut Rafizi, beberapa perkara dapat disahkan berdasarkan laporan wawancara Free Malaysia Today kelmarin bersama Ketua Pendakwaraya Hong Kong, Kevin Zervos mengenai siasatan kes rasuah RM40 juta itu.
Antaranya, pihak berkuasa Malaysia sama ada Suruhanjaya Pencegahan Rasuah Malaysia (SPRM), Peguam Negara atau kedua-duanya sekali yang memaklumkan kepada ICAC bahawa wang RM40 juta adalah sumbangan politik kepada Umno.
Katanya, ternyata RM40 juta memang dibekukan di dalam sebuah akaun Michael Chia (walaupun namanya tidak disebut) dan disyaki pihak berkuasa Hong Kong disimpan bagi pihak Musa Aman (walaupun namanya tidak disebut).
“Keterangan Kevin Zervos itu mengesahkan Nazri Aziz tidak berterus terang di Dewan Rakyat baru-baru ini apabila beliau memaklumkan bahawa keputusan ICAC menghentikan siasatan adalah oleh kerana ICAC mendapati wang RM40 juta tersebut adalah sumbangan kepada Umno.
“Datuk Seri Nazri Aziz sekali-kali tidak pernah menyatakan kepada Dewan Rakyat bahawa ICAC terpaksa menghentikan siasatan kerana dimaklumkan oleh pihak berkuasa Malaysia bahawa wang RM40 juta itu adalah sumbangan politik.
“Apabila pihak berkuasa Malaysia yang memaklumkan perkara tersebut kepada ICAC, ia mengesahkan desas-desus selama ini bahawa ICAC terpaksa menghentikan siasatan kerana tidak mendapat kerjasama sepenuhnya dari pihak berkuasa Malaysia.
“Malah, kenyataan Kevin Zervos itu adalah lebih berat, kerana ia membayangkan bahawa pihak berkuasa Malaysia (sama ada SPRM, Peguam Negara atau kedua-duanya sekali) bersekongkol untuk menghentikan siasatan terhadap Datuk Seri Musa Aman dan Michael Chia dengan memberikan maklumat yang tidak tepat mengenai wang RM40 juta itu, tanpa siasatan yang telus dan bebas,” jelas Rafizi.
Beliau juga yakin pihak berkuasa Malaysia tidak pun menyerahkan bukti-bukti dan hasil siasatan yang menyokong kesimpulannya bahawa RM40 juta itu adalah sumbangan politik yang berpunca dari hasil yang sah di sisi undang-undang.
Sebelum ini, Chia yang rapat dengan Musa ditahan di Hong Kong berikutan disyaki terlibat dalam penggubahan wang haram RM40 juta.
Taikun balak itu menyatakan wang berkenaan milik Musa tetapi pemimpin Umno terutama Nazri mendakwa ia adalah dana untuk Umno Sabah.
Keadilan kemudian mendedahkan Chia menaja kenderaan mewah, Hummer kepada anak Nazri yang bermati-mati mempertahankan Chia.- keadilandaily
PKR hands new leads to ICAC over RM40mil probe...
PKR
has provided Hong Kong's Independent Against Corruption (ICAC) with
several fresh leads for its probe against a businessman accused in 2008
of smuggling money to Kuala Lumpur.
The details were provided to the ICAC this morning following Hong Kong chief prosecutor Kevin Paul Zervos' promise to reopen investigations should new evidence emerge.
The party delegation, led by PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli, submitted a report with supporting documents that detail the following:
More evidence soon
“Other than these three issues, PKR also agreed to hand over more evidence, including proof of transaction in Hong Kong, to the ICAC in three weeks to help their investigation,” he said.
Previously, Zervos had told Free Mayasia Today (FMT) that Hong Kong had "insufficient evidence" at the time to "take the case further".
"Material that was obtained from Malaysia was that it was political donations.
"If anything comes up now to show that this wasn’t the case, the matter would definitely be looked into," said Zervos, in a report that appeared on Tuesday.
In 2008, Chia was investigated by Hong Kong authorities for allegedly trying to board a plane to Kuala Lumpur with Singaporean currency worth RM40 million.
Speculations over the purpose and source of the money were rife, since Chia is well connected and is said to enjoy very cozy ties with Sabah chief minister and Sabah Umno chief Musa Aman.
Four years later, Nazri told Parliament that both the Attorney-General's Chambers and the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) had cleared Chia of any wrongdoing.
He said both departments also concluded that the funds is meant for Sabah Umno and not Musa personally.- malaysiakini
Speaking to The Malaysian Insider from Hong Kong this morning, Rafizi Ramli, who is leading the party’s four-member fact-finding mission there, said it was not immediately clear what the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) plans do with the new evidence but expressed confidence that the case would likely be reopened.
In PKR’s report to Hong Kong’s graftbusters, three reasons were listed to encourage the world-renowned ICAC to reopen the RM40 million graft probe against Musa and Chia — separate claims from two Sabah MPs that the money was not a political donation to Umno as claimed; and the receipt of a luxury vehicle from Chia by Umno minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz, possibly for corrupt reasons.
“They did give us a reference number and I think that by practice here, all cases are opened once a report is lodged.
“Furthermore, we were accompanied today by James To, leader of the Democrats in the legislative council, and we have also received support from one or two other council members who will follow-up in Parliament and with the ICAC later,” Rafizi (picture) said in a phone call to this news portal.
He added that the presence of PKR’s four-man team in Hong Kong has also generated quite a media buzz, another promising indicator that the matter was unlikely to whittle down so soon.
“When we lodged the report this morning, there were already six or seven press organisations waiting there. We will be hosting a press conference later this afternoon to speak on the issue. And then once the press and legislative council members pick up this issue, it won’t die down so quickly.
“So the case will definitely be opened,” he said.
Rafizi added that representatives from the ICAC had particularly expressed interest in PKR’s possession of more evidence to prove the money-laundering link between Malaysia and Hong Kong, in the form of documents of transactions made in Hong Kong, and the persons involved from there.
He said the agency had urged his team to return with the evidence at a later date.
“We do have some of those details. And I think the MACC (Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission) had it all along.
“So I have given my undertaking to return with the evidence in about three or four weeks’ time to give a full set of details, including transactions made here (in Hong Kong) and so on,” Rafizi said.
The PKR strategy director added that he will request for Sabah lawmakers Datuk Seri Lajim Ukin and Datuk Seri Wilfred Mojilip Bumburing, who recently left Barisan Nasional (BN) for the opposition, to offer their testimonies to the Hong Kong authorities.
Both men had previously claimed that the RM40 million “political donation” had never reached Umno as claimed but had been kept in the personal bank account of an individual closely connected to the accused in the case.
Rafizi said based on PKR’s information today, the ICAC officials will prepare a report for their superiors before proceeding with the case.
He said the officials were very careful not to mention names or offer any information of their knowledge in the case, and had even advised PKR against revealing the names of the accused and those involved in the matter to the Hong Kong media.
“I can understand the caution. They are professionals. And we did ask if they will reopen the case but the practice is that, there will be no official communication from them on whether the case will be opened.
“But we will be able to seek a progress report in the next three or four weeks,” he said.
In PKR’s report to the ICAC today, it was pointed out that Hong Kong’s Chief Prosecutor Kevin Zervos had told the Malaysian media of his willingness to revisit Musa’s case should there be additional evidence to prove that the funds in question were meant for his personal use and had not been a political donation to Umno.
“We believe the new evidence and leads nullify the veracity of information previously communicated by the Malaysian authorities to ICAC, that the RM40 million held in an account of a Malaysian on behalf of a top official was meant for political donation.
“We maintain that the funds worth RM40 million were part of a bigger ring that launders money from illegal logging activities through Hong Kong on behalf of the corrupt officials of the Malaysian government,” PKR said in its two-page report emailed to The Malaysian Insider here.
At 2pm today, Rafizi and his team will be meeting with local Hong Kong NGOs and the media for a special briefing on the case.
Chia’s alleged link with Musa first exploded in the media following an April article by whistleblower site Sarawak Report, which had claimed that former was caught trying to leave the Hong Kong International Airport with the RM40 million in Singapore currency.
At the time, Chia had allegedly told the authorities that the money was meant for Musa, kicking off a probe on the series of funds transfers from Malaysia to Hong Kong that was then believed to be the possible laundering of monies generated from illegal logging activities in Sabah.
The issue hit headlines again last month when Nazri told Parliament that Musa had been cleared of corruption in the matter after Malaysian and Hong Kong anti-graft authorities found that the money was a “political donation” to Sabah Umno and was not meant for Musa’s personal use.
But in the ensuing debates on the issue, Pakatan Rakyat (PR) lawmakers chided Nazri for declaring Musa innocent without providing proof that the ICAC had cleared the chief minister of its own accord.
According to Nazri, the ICAC had closed the case after the MACC
discovered in its probe that the money in Chia’s possession was meant
for Sabah Umno and not Musa.
After Nazri’s denial, Rafizi held a press conference in Parliament revealing what he said was photographic proof that Nazri had allegedly received kickbacks from Chia to clear his name, in the form of a RM459,000 Hummer given to his son.
PKR embarked on its fact-finding mission to Hong Kong yesterday to uncover if the ICAC’s decision to close to case was due to the lack of c-ooperation from the MACC. Apart from Rafizi, PKR MPs William Leong and Lee Hoy Sian, and Perak assemblyman Chang Lih Kang, were also included in the mission.
In an interview with news portal Free Malaysia Today on Tuesday, Zervos had revealed that it was information from Malaysia that had said the RM40 million was a donation, leading to the case’s closure.
He admitted that at the time, there was no further information or evidence on the nature of the monies forthcoming at the time and the case could not be taken further due to “insufficient evidence”.
Zervos’ remarks could prove detrimental to Malaysian authorities, who have repeatedly claimed that sufficient evidence had proven that the money was a donation and not for Musa’s personal use.- malaysian insider
cheers.
The details were provided to the ICAC this morning following Hong Kong chief prosecutor Kevin Paul Zervos' promise to reopen investigations should new evidence emerge.
The party delegation, led by PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli, submitted a report with supporting documents that detail the following:
1. Former Sabah Umno committee member Lajim Ukin's ignorance that the money, reportedly amounting to RM40 million, was a donation for his party.In a press release today, Rafizi said the PKR delegation had a discussion with ICAC officers regarding the three issues, while stressing that they believe the Malaysian authorities' claim that the RM40 million was a “political donation” was untrue.
2. Former United Pasokmomogun Kadazandusun Murut Organisation (UPKO) deputy president Wilfred Bumburing's claim that the RM40 million was deposited in a personal account and not that of Umno, as reported by Malaysian Insider last month.
3. Alleged links between de facto Law Minister Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz - the person who told Parliament that the money was a political donation - and Michael Chia, the businessman in question.
“Other than these three issues, PKR also agreed to hand over more evidence, including proof of transaction in Hong Kong, to the ICAC in three weeks to help their investigation,” he said.
Previously, Zervos had told Free Mayasia Today (FMT) that Hong Kong had "insufficient evidence" at the time to "take the case further".
"Material that was obtained from Malaysia was that it was political donations.
"If anything comes up now to show that this wasn’t the case, the matter would definitely be looked into," said Zervos, in a report that appeared on Tuesday.
In 2008, Chia was investigated by Hong Kong authorities for allegedly trying to board a plane to Kuala Lumpur with Singaporean currency worth RM40 million.
Speculations over the purpose and source of the money were rife, since Chia is well connected and is said to enjoy very cozy ties with Sabah chief minister and Sabah Umno chief Musa Aman.
Four years later, Nazri told Parliament that both the Attorney-General's Chambers and the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) had cleared Chia of any wrongdoing.
He said both departments also concluded that the funds is meant for Sabah Umno and not Musa personally.- malaysiakini
PKR lodges fresh evidence on Musa RM40 million graft in Hong Kong...
PKR furnished fresh evidence today to Hong Kong’s anti-graft authority on Datuk Musa Aman’s RM40 million graft case and has been invited to return with more proof on the Sabah chief minister’s alleged money-laundering link with businessman Michael Chia.Speaking to The Malaysian Insider from Hong Kong this morning, Rafizi Ramli, who is leading the party’s four-member fact-finding mission there, said it was not immediately clear what the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) plans do with the new evidence but expressed confidence that the case would likely be reopened.
In PKR’s report to Hong Kong’s graftbusters, three reasons were listed to encourage the world-renowned ICAC to reopen the RM40 million graft probe against Musa and Chia — separate claims from two Sabah MPs that the money was not a political donation to Umno as claimed; and the receipt of a luxury vehicle from Chia by Umno minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz, possibly for corrupt reasons.
“They did give us a reference number and I think that by practice here, all cases are opened once a report is lodged.
“Furthermore, we were accompanied today by James To, leader of the Democrats in the legislative council, and we have also received support from one or two other council members who will follow-up in Parliament and with the ICAC later,” Rafizi (picture) said in a phone call to this news portal.
He added that the presence of PKR’s four-man team in Hong Kong has also generated quite a media buzz, another promising indicator that the matter was unlikely to whittle down so soon.
“When we lodged the report this morning, there were already six or seven press organisations waiting there. We will be hosting a press conference later this afternoon to speak on the issue. And then once the press and legislative council members pick up this issue, it won’t die down so quickly.
“So the case will definitely be opened,” he said.
Rafizi added that representatives from the ICAC had particularly expressed interest in PKR’s possession of more evidence to prove the money-laundering link between Malaysia and Hong Kong, in the form of documents of transactions made in Hong Kong, and the persons involved from there.
He said the agency had urged his team to return with the evidence at a later date.
“We do have some of those details. And I think the MACC (Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission) had it all along.
“So I have given my undertaking to return with the evidence in about three or four weeks’ time to give a full set of details, including transactions made here (in Hong Kong) and so on,” Rafizi said.
The PKR strategy director added that he will request for Sabah lawmakers Datuk Seri Lajim Ukin and Datuk Seri Wilfred Mojilip Bumburing, who recently left Barisan Nasional (BN) for the opposition, to offer their testimonies to the Hong Kong authorities.
Both men had previously claimed that the RM40 million “political donation” had never reached Umno as claimed but had been kept in the personal bank account of an individual closely connected to the accused in the case.
Rafizi said based on PKR’s information today, the ICAC officials will prepare a report for their superiors before proceeding with the case.
He said the officials were very careful not to mention names or offer any information of their knowledge in the case, and had even advised PKR against revealing the names of the accused and those involved in the matter to the Hong Kong media.
“I can understand the caution. They are professionals. And we did ask if they will reopen the case but the practice is that, there will be no official communication from them on whether the case will be opened.
“But we will be able to seek a progress report in the next three or four weeks,” he said.
In PKR’s report to the ICAC today, it was pointed out that Hong Kong’s Chief Prosecutor Kevin Zervos had told the Malaysian media of his willingness to revisit Musa’s case should there be additional evidence to prove that the funds in question were meant for his personal use and had not been a political donation to Umno.
“We believe the new evidence and leads nullify the veracity of information previously communicated by the Malaysian authorities to ICAC, that the RM40 million held in an account of a Malaysian on behalf of a top official was meant for political donation.
“We maintain that the funds worth RM40 million were part of a bigger ring that launders money from illegal logging activities through Hong Kong on behalf of the corrupt officials of the Malaysian government,” PKR said in its two-page report emailed to The Malaysian Insider here.
At 2pm today, Rafizi and his team will be meeting with local Hong Kong NGOs and the media for a special briefing on the case.
Chia’s alleged link with Musa first exploded in the media following an April article by whistleblower site Sarawak Report, which had claimed that former was caught trying to leave the Hong Kong International Airport with the RM40 million in Singapore currency.
At the time, Chia had allegedly told the authorities that the money was meant for Musa, kicking off a probe on the series of funds transfers from Malaysia to Hong Kong that was then believed to be the possible laundering of monies generated from illegal logging activities in Sabah.
The issue hit headlines again last month when Nazri told Parliament that Musa had been cleared of corruption in the matter after Malaysian and Hong Kong anti-graft authorities found that the money was a “political donation” to Sabah Umno and was not meant for Musa’s personal use.
But in the ensuing debates on the issue, Pakatan Rakyat (PR) lawmakers chided Nazri for declaring Musa innocent without providing proof that the ICAC had cleared the chief minister of its own accord.
After Nazri’s denial, Rafizi held a press conference in Parliament revealing what he said was photographic proof that Nazri had allegedly received kickbacks from Chia to clear his name, in the form of a RM459,000 Hummer given to his son.
PKR embarked on its fact-finding mission to Hong Kong yesterday to uncover if the ICAC’s decision to close to case was due to the lack of c-ooperation from the MACC. Apart from Rafizi, PKR MPs William Leong and Lee Hoy Sian, and Perak assemblyman Chang Lih Kang, were also included in the mission.
In an interview with news portal Free Malaysia Today on Tuesday, Zervos had revealed that it was information from Malaysia that had said the RM40 million was a donation, leading to the case’s closure.
He admitted that at the time, there was no further information or evidence on the nature of the monies forthcoming at the time and the case could not be taken further due to “insufficient evidence”.
Zervos’ remarks could prove detrimental to Malaysian authorities, who have repeatedly claimed that sufficient evidence had proven that the money was a donation and not for Musa’s personal use.- malaysian insider
cheers.
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