Sunday, October 11, 2015

Detained Malaysian Lawyer Starts Hunger Strike Amid PM Finance Scandal - Malaysia Mired in Corruption - Who Took the US$700 Million Bribe Ostensibly Related to MH370? - AD Has Already Been Called to Malaysia Once

This article appeared 
at The Guardian

Matthias Chang represented a former ruling party member arrested after he launched a global campaign to highlight alleged corruption by Najib Razak

A woman looks towards the haze-shrouded prime minister's office in Putrajaya. Najib Razak faces mounting calls to explain huge sums allegedly missing from a state-owned development company he launched. Photograph: Olivia Harris/Reuters

Friday 9 October 2015

A detained Malaysian lawyer has started a hunger strike after being arrested over his involvement in efforts to expose a scandal rocking the government of the prime minister, Najib Razak.

Matthias Chang was arrested on Thursday under a tough domestic security law that allows detention for up to a month without trial.

Chang had been representing Khairuddin Abu Hassan, a former ruling party member who was detained last month under the same security law after he launched a global campaign to highlight alleged corruption by Najib.

He released a statement calling his and Khairuddin's arrests "a heinous tactic" to silence those speaking out "against the tyranny and corruption of the Najib regime," and announced that he had begun refusing food.

Chang is also a former political secretary to Mahathir Mohamad, Malaysia's premier from 1981 to 2003, who has led calls for Najib to be investigated.

The prime minister faces mounting calls to explain massive sums of money allegedly missing from a state-owned development company he launched, as well as the sensational revelation in July that nearly $700m in mysterious transfers had been made to his personal bank accounts.

The pressure grew this week, with Malaysia's nine state sultans issuing a rare joint statement on Wednesday saying the scandal had created a "crisis of confidence" and calling for a full investigation.

Both Najib and the state-owned development company, 1Malaysia Development Berhad, vehemently deny any wrongdoing. Inquiries have been hobbled, however, with Najib firing his attorney general in July, and police raiding the offices of the country's anti-corruption agency in August. Malaysia protesters regroup to urge PM Najib Razak's resignation

Khairuddin, aided by Chang, had visited authorities in several countries to call for investigations into the cross-border money flows.

Regulators in the US and elsewhere are now reportedly scrutinising the affair, with authorities in Switzerland and Singapore saying they had frozen some accounts as they investigate possible money laundering and other crimes.

Najib's allies say the money deposited into his accounts was "political donations" from Middle Eastern sources but have refused to provide details.

Rights and legal groups have harshly criticised the arrests of Khairuddin and Chang under the Special Offences (Special Measures) Act, which Najib's government had passed with a promise it would not be used against political opponents.

The president of the Malaysia Bar Council, Steven Thiru, said the bar was "absolutely appalled and outraged" at the arrests. At the end:

Related:

Malaysia's royals make unprecedented call for action on corruption
US investigators launch probes into scandal-hit Malaysian Najib Razak
Malaysia's Mahathir calls for parliament to sack prime minister Najib Razak
David Cameron presses Malaysian PM on corruption claims
Malaysia protesters regroup to urge PM Najib Razak's resignation

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