Najib asked cabinet not to make Saudi prince’s donation public, witness says


Former PM Najib Razak had, in 2010, asked the cabinet not to make the donation from a Saudi prince to Yayasan 1MDB public, the KL High Court was told today. – The Malaysian Insight pic by Hasnoor Hussain, February 10, 2021.

THE Kuala Lumpur High Court today was told that Najib Razak had asked the cabinet not to make the donation from a Saudi prince to Yayasan 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) public as per the donor’s request.

Former deputy chief secretary Mazidah Abdul Majid, 72, said the former prime minister informed the matter during a cabinet meeting held in Putrajaya on September 8, 2010.

The meeting was chaired by Najib himself, as the then finance minister, she said.

“Saudi prince Sultan Abdul Aziz Al-Saud channelled the donation from his charity foundation to Yayasan 1MDB. Najib said the first contribution had been received and the prince had promised to channel subsequent donations later.

“Najib said with the donation, more projects and corporate social responsibility (CSR) programmes can be implemented through Yayasan 1MDB,” she said when reading her witness statement at the former prime minister’s 1MDB trial.

The 11th prosecution witness said at the same meeting, Najib also asked the ministers to propose CSR projects that could be implemented in October 2010.

“He also said the government should be more creative in finding other sources of funds as it would give more flexibility to the government to help the people,” she said.

Mazidah said the minutes of the meeting were later verified by cabinet secretary Mohd Sidek Hassan and the then deputy prime minister Muhyiddin Yassin.

In September 2019, former 1MDB chief executive officer Shahrol Azral Ibrahim Halmi testified that fugitive businessman, Low Taek Jho handed to him four cheques totalling US$100 million (RM404.4 million), which were alleged donations from the Saudi royal family to the Yayasan 1MDB Trust Fund.

He then passed the cheques to the 1MDB Finance Department for safekeeping before tendering his resignation in 2013.

Najib, 67, is facing four charges of using his position to obtain bribes totalling RM2.3 billion from 1MDB funds and 21 charges of money-laundering involving the same amount.

Trial before judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah continues tomorrow. – Bernama, February 10, 2021.


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  • Can we charge minister etc for lying in cabinet meeting?

    Posted 3 years ago by Against Corruption · Reply