Dr M: Jho Low may be a needle in the haystack, but we will find him


(Bernama): The government will continue looking for fugitive businessman Low Taek Jho or Jho Low although it is difficult, says Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

“There are only seven billion people (in the world), so it’s not very difficult,” said the Prime Minister.

“We can find a needle in a haystack, and he will be the needle,” he told a press conference after chairing a meeting of the Special Cabinet Committee on Anti-Corruption here on Thursday.

Low, identified by Malaysian and US investigators as the person who played the key role in the billion-dollar 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) scandal, is believed to have left Hong Kong to an island near Macau.

Low, in a statement from his spokesman issued through his lawyers, claimed that the article contained “half-truths” and blamed Dr Mahathir’s administration for it.

Asked about Low’s accusations that it was politically motivated, Dr Mahathir said the fugitive businessman has said that many times before.

“He was politically motivated to steal money,” said Dr Mahathir.

On the WSJ report, Dr Mahathir said the government needed to get the documents mentioned in the report before taking any action.

“We need to find the documents first and make use of the documents as proof that this actually happened.

At the moment, it’s just a story in the press,” he said.

Citing minutes from a series of previously undisclosed meetings, the WSJ reported on Monday (Jan 7) that Chinese officials told visiting Malaysians that Beijing would use its influence to try to get the United States and other countries to drop their probes of allegations that allies of the then prime minister, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, and others plundered 1MDB.

In return, the WSJ said, Malaysia offered lucrative stakes in railway and pipeline projects for China’s “One Belt, One Road” programme of building infrastructure abroad.

The WSJ said the deals include the East Coast Rail Link and Trans Sabah Gas Pipeline projects, which were reported to have been financed at an above-market value to generate excess cash for other needs.

 

 



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