Sunday, March 29, 2015

Meanwhile, Malaysia's 1 MDB USD 10 billion debacle has been reduced to a dispute over party photos

28 MAR 2015 

All About Photos? – Latest Attacks Against Sarawak Report

All About Photos? – Latest Attacks 

Against Sarawak Report

Hudud images that must come down?
Hudud images that must come down?
In recent weeks Sarawak Report has taken a front line position, reporting on a number of extremely serious issues to do with billions of dollars of missing money from Malaysia’s development fund, 1MDB.
We have released a considerable number of documents and emails that have raised uproar in Malaysia over issues of corruption, governance of the country’s finances and the rule of law.
However, it appears that for some of the main characters, who have appeared in our reports, there is more concern over certain photographs than whether or not they might be questioned or held to account over 1MDB.
We conclude this, because in recent days Sarawak Report has found itself subjected to a number of aggressive campaigns to force us to remove these photographs, which provided valuable corroborative evidence for our articles.
Paris Hilton after an excess of Cristal Champagne provided in yet another marathon session financed by Jho Low in the South of France 2010
Paris Hilton after an excess of Cristal Champagne provided in yet another marathon session financed by Jho Low in the South of France 2010
Given the articles and pictures record vast expenditures by certain individuals, who are associated with the disappearance of billions of ringgit that were supposed to benefit Malaysia’s poor and backward regions, we believe they represent valid news content and it has been in the public interest to see these pictures.
Hacking
On Monday of last week highly professional hackers intruded into the Sarawak Report website’s administration.
They started their work at 10.37 am and within half an hour had deleted one of our stories and then made sure to wipe it from the trash section also of the site.
These hackers took care to disguise their IP address and then change it, in a bid to hide their location.
These were the pictures someone paid professional hackers to remove from our site
Al-Qubaisi at play – from the story someone paid professional hackers to remove from our site
Both IPs were linked to proxy servers and they disguised themselves as coming from Google – a fairly easy trick, according to web experts.
So, which was the story that the hackers wanted removed?
It was the story about the double existence of Abu Dhabi’s Aabar Fund Chairman, Khadem al-Qubaisi.
This article had focused on the fact that this chairman of a fund, which has done a number of heavily criticised deals with 1MDB, had received a payment of over USD$20 million from Good Star Limited.
Good Star Limited was the company we had identified as the recipient of the secret USD$700 million ‘loan repayment’, made supposedly to PetroSaudi from 1MDB.
We have established that Good Star is a company controlled by Jho Low.
By contrast, Khadem al-Qubaisi signs a cooperation agreement with 1MDB in 2013 under the eye of the PM
By contrast, Khadem al-Qubaisi signs a cooperation agreement with 1MDB in 2013 under the eye of the PM
So, we queried, why did the Chairman of the Abu Dhabi fund Aabar receive this $20 million payment from Good Star, shortly after Aabar engaged in an unusual  guarantee of 1MDB’s bond issue to buy up power-providers in Malaysia?
Several critics have queried why this deal, engineered by Goldman Sachs for a record 11% in commission payments, involved a guarantee by Aabar at all?
These critics have pointed out that under the terms of the guarantee agreement nearly half the money raised by the bond was committed to remain in Abu Dhabi.
Another picture someone wants us to take down.
Another picture someone wants us to take down.
They also point out that the deal also gave Aabar an option to buy up half of the power plants in question and that in order to buy itself out of these restrictions 1MDB may well have had to pay up to $1 billion dollars at a later date.
This weekend DAP opposition leader Tony Pua pointed out that, because of the way 1MDB chose to handle these transactions, the fund ended up raising over RM20 billion in borrowing to purchase just RM10 billion worth of power assets in Malaysia.
Therefore, we asked what happened to that missing money and why did the head of Aabar, which collaborated on these deals, receive a payment in 2012 from Good Star?
Now, we seek reassurance that the reason our article was hacked and taken down was not because certain parties were dismayed at our revelation over the payment?
Or, because the public posture of Mr al-Qubaisi as a sober civil servant working for the state of Abu Dhabi’s sovereign funds has been undermined by the party-loving images we published along with the evidence of his extreme wealth?
“Abuse of copyright”?
How much money can we waste here? - Jho and Paris laugh while Malaysians starve
How much money can we waste here? – These pictures of Jho and Paris have been widely circulated on the internet since 2010 and yet now the ‘copyright holder’ wants them down.
Sarawak Report has simultaneously been faced with a different kind of attack, which was also been directed at getting rid of certain images on our site.
For several days a non-existent celebrity pictures agency has pestered our internet server company to make us remove the pictures we have shown of Jho Low cavorting in the South of France with Paris Hilton (he paid her millions of dollars on several occasions to come and join his champagne fuelled parties).
This non-existent agency has used threatening and legalistic language, demanding we remove the pictures, which have been circulated on the web by various other online magazines since 2010, because they say they have the copyright.
Time to hide expensive bad behaviour as Jho Low morphs into a 'philanthropist'?
Time to hide expensive bad behaviour as Jho Low morphs into a ‘philanthropist’?
So far the non-existent picture agency has not provided proof of this copyright.
Nor has it  shown any interest in being paid for the pictures.
Instead it has engaged in aggressive backdoor tactics to get our site and other sites to take down the pictures by threatening copyright action against our server companies.
Mr Jho Low has reportedly made commitments to obey his parents and turn over a new leaf when it comes to public displays of expensive debauchery.
So, we seek an assurance that it is not he who is behind this attempt to to buy up the copyright over these various pictures, purely in order to remove them from sight?
If Mr Low is attempting to retrospectively buy back his reputation by aggressively bullying news reporters into removing the evidence of his past misbehaviour, we believe he should provide Malaysians with proof that he is not using their own development money to do so.
Time to show these pictures, because they soon may receive legal protection thanks to Jho Low's siphoned billions.
Time to show these tawdry pictures, because they soon may receive legal protection thanks to Jho Low’s siphoned billions.
After all, the first pictures of this youthful tycoon’s ostentatious partying emerged shortly after the original PetroSaudi deal in September 2009, after which USD$700 million was diverted into the account of Good Star from 1MDB.
Another USD$160 million followed in September 2010 and a further USD$260 million was paid by 1MDB to PetroSaudi, which then passed the money to Jarvace via PetroSaudi Seychelles in order to buy out UBG bank, in which Jho Low had a stake and of which he was a board member.
Is it this money which is now being used to finance these aggressive ‘copyright suits’ to white-wash his image?
Concern that this might be the case has caused Sarawak Report to circulate (above) certain pictures that have already been in the public domain for over four years, but which we had originally felt too unnecessarily undignified for us to publish.
Did these people ever once think of the hungry Malaysian poor in whose name 1MDB raised so much money?
Did these people ever once think of the hungry Malaysian poor in whose name 1MDB raised so much money?
They include pictures of a plainly drunk Paris Hilton clinging to Mr Low while her short dress rides up to give full view to her underwear.
She is being carried out ‘legless’ from a nightclub.
If Mr Low (or his misguided supporters) believes that he can expunge such memories by throwing big bucks into legal action against us and others, we believe that such images should now be widely circulated, so they stick in people’s minds before any possible enforcement can take place.
Especially if the whole strategy is being funded by money siphoned from the public purse through 1MDB.
We suggest people download these photos and pass them to each other and put them on Facebook, along with the pictures that someone is trying to remove concerning Mr Low’s business partner Khadem al-Qubaisi
From publications all over the world - these antics have been there for all to see for four years, but now someone is trying to pretend they never existed
From publications all over the world – these antics have been there for all to see for four years, but now someone is trying to pretend they never existed


20 MAR 2015

  
Why Did Jho Low’s Company Good Star Pay Aabar’s Top Executive Khadem al-Qubaisi USD$20.75 million?

Why Did Jho Low’s Company Good Star Pay Aabar’s Top Executive Khadem al-Qubaisi USD$20.75 million?

Khadem enjoying San Tropez
Khadem enjoying San Tropez
There are two very different sides to the prominent Abu Dhabi civil servant Khadem Al-Qubaisi, who chairs the emirate’s Aabar sovereign fund, according to an extensive body of information that has been passed to Sarawak Report.
For example, when he appeared in Kuala Lumpur on March 12th 2013, playing the key figure in a much vaunted multi-billion joint venture investment project with 1MDB, he cut a highly traditional figure.
Clad in flowing white Arab robes he presented a picture of strict Muslim sobriety.
However, as our photographs show, there is another side to this senior executive.
In Las Vegas and the South of France he has become recently known as a super rich playboy, who owns a string of sports cars, three vast villas and one of the world’s largest yachts.
Khadem in his role as top fund manager
Khadem in his role as top fund manager

This Mr Qubaisi favours ‘daring’ t-shirts featuring lewd graphics or terrorist gunmen. He owns nightclubs and hangs out in strip joints (see below).

Sovereign wealth

Yet Al-Qubaisi is one of Abu Dhabi’s most senior fund managers.
He is the Chairman of Aabar, which is a major subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund IPIC (International Petroleum Investment Company) of which he is also the Managing Director.
His immediate boss is Sheik Mansour a brother of the Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed Zayed Al-Nahyan, who accompanied Al-Qubaisi on the 2013 visit to Putrajaya for the official signing ceremony of the so-called ‘joint venture investment’ between the United Arab Emirates and Malaysia.
Aabar Chairman Khadem Al-Qubaisi stretches out his hand to shake the deal
Aabar Chairman Khadem Al-Qubaisi stretches out his hand to shake the deal (at his right side is Aabar’s CEO Mohamed Ahmed Badawy Al-Husseiny, who eventually claimed to have backed Wolf of Wall Street’s $100 million production costs)
Prime Minister Najib Razak made sure that the full day event was attended with the greatest possible fan-fare, as it was announced that the two countries would raise billions for investment in projects in Malaysia on a supposedly 50:50 basis, which would allegedly provide Malaysians with “hundreds of thousands of well-paying jobs”.
According to news reports on the official 1MDB press site, local media were told that the Arab country had committed no less than RM39 billion ringgit of investment for Malaysia, RM18 billion of which was for a joint venture with 1MDB:
“The oil-rich United Arab Emirates (UAE) has committed RM39bil to two projects that will create hundreds of thousands of well-paying jobs for Malaysians.
The projects involve the setting up of a RM21bil strategic petroleum reserve in Tanjung Piai, Johor, and a RM18bil strategic partnership in the Tun Razak Exchange (TRX)….The second project, involving Abu Dhabi-based sovereign fund Aabar and 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB), is to promote fresh economic initiatives to spur billions of ringgit in long-term sustainable investments in Malaysia.” [Star newspaper]
But, as it turns out, two year later no money has been raised by Abu Dhabi for this venture.
According to DAP’s opposition spokesman Tony Pua, USD3 billion was raised in borrowing by 1MDB in the name of these projects, but it was not matched by Aabar. And of even that money, only half can be publicly accounted for:
“Just over half of that money is now missing. About RM5 billion of it went into an anonymous fund and is parked somewhere”, says Pua.
In fact, it is clear that far from investing in Malaysia, ‘joint venture partners’ such as Abu Dhabi’s Aabar have been sucking a fortune out 1MDB.
Khadem Al-Qubaisi having shed his image to party once again
Khadem Al-Qubaisi having shed his sober image to party once again

Aabar’s strange investment strategies with 1MDB

For example, as Sarawak Report exclusively revealed two years ago, a USD$1.75 billion bond issue that was raised in March 2012 to fund 1MDB’s purchase of a power plant, Tanjong Energy, ended up being fantastically expensive, not least because it was jointly guaranteed by Aabar.
San Trop club scene lures Al-Khubaisi
San Trop club scene lures Al-Khubaisi
In July 2013 Sarawak Report published details of that bond issue, which until then had been kept secret.
These reveal that the terms of the deal which 1MDB entered into with Aabar could hardly have been more invidious.
Given the costs involved the conditions are barely inexplicable, say experts like the Edge Magazine, which has examined the matter in detail.
To begin with the rate of interest was 5.99%, meaning the money could easily have been raised much more cheaply elsewhere.
Even more extraordinary was the 11% declared in fees by the commissioning bank Goldman Sachs International, when a more usual rate for such a deal would have been less than 1%.
And there was another very peculiar aspect to the loan, which lost 1MDB a huge amount of money, say critics.
Is this how Abu Dhabi's top public investor is expected to behave off duty?
Is this how Abu Dhabi’s top public investor is expected to behave off duty?
This was an option that was granted to Aabar to buy up 49% of the power plant in return for its guarantee of the loan.
Staggeringly, the terms of the deal also allowed Aabar to keep 45% of the proceeds (RM9.3 billion) of the Malaysian funded bond issue, in return for its role as ‘co-guarantor’.
In order to buy Aabar out of this prejudicial position 1MDB later had to pay at least USD$250 million, says Pua.
The Edge business magazine has itself calculated that the total cost of this barmy agreement might have actually exceeded USD$1 billion.
The magazine says that Aabar was also the guarantor of a second Genteng power plant purchase loan, which was framed along similar lines later in August 2012.
These deals were, needless to say presided over by the 1MDB Advisory Board and its Chairman, the Finance Minister and Prime Minister.

Time to investigate the links between Aabar and Jho Low?

Terrorism t-shirt - cool in the South of France?
Terrorism t-shirt – cool in the South of France?
It is against this background that Sarawak Report has now obtained documents, which show that the company Good Star Limited, Male, Seychelles, paid USD$20.75 million into the Edmund de Rothschild Private Bank (BPERE), Luxembourg account of a company owned by the Aabar Chairman, Khadem al-Qubaisi on 20th February 2013.
Sarawak Report revealed earlier this month that Good Star is a company controlled by the businessman Jho Low, who is closely linked to the Malaysian Prime Minister cum Finance Minister cum 1MDB Advisory Board Chairman, Najib Razak.
This Cayman Island company with an address in the Seychelles received a total of at least USD$940 million of the USD$2.2 billion that was supposedly invested in the “front company” PetroSaudi by 1MDB in 2009/2010.
Hovering or presiding? Jho Low accompanying PM's wife Rosmah and the Crown Prince during March 12 signing visit
Hovering or presiding? Jho Low accompanying PM’s wife Rosmah and the Crown Prince during March 12 2013 signing visit
The details of our expose have revealed Jho Low to be the man driver of the whole PetroSaudi deal in 2009/10.
We have also demonstrated how Jho Low claimed to be acting on behalf of the Prime Minister.
So was Jho Low still in the 1MDB driving seat during the later 1MDB power plant purchase deals in 2012 and the Aabar ‘joint venture agreement’ in March 2013 and if so why did his company pay Vasco Investment Services, a company which is beneficially owned by Khadem al-Qubaisi, USD$20.75 million in February 2013?

Network of links between Jho Low and Aabar

Centre of misbehaviour
As the Chairman of the private Hakkasan Group al-Qubaisi is now also a major nightclub owner
Sarawak Report has over the past months identified numerous links between Aabar Investments and the businessman Jho Low.
Coincidentally, many of these links also involve 1MDB.
Abu Dhabi first appeared on the scene in the context of Jho Low back in 2008, when a company fronted by Low, called Majestic Masterpiece, took a substantial interest in the Sarawak Taib family owned UBG bank.
UBG had just managed to persuade the Employee Provident Fund (controlled by the former State Secretary of Sarawak amongst others) to buy out its share of RHB Bank for over RM1.4 billion in 2007. Therefore, it’s parent company CMS had money to invest.
The Edge has detailed how Jho Low offered to invest that money and then sell the bank on for a profit for Taib, having made a cool one hundred million up front from the Sarawak politician, by persuading him to buy up chunks of Iskandar, in which he had already taken a stake, before he had even paid the deposit.
Another Khadem T-shirt tells that he answers to no man
Another Khadem T-shirt tells that he answers to no man
The owner of Majestic Masterpiece was an outfit named ADKMIC Abu Dhabi-Kuwait-Malaysia Investment Corporation, based in Abu Dhabi.
This is a shadowy corporation to have taken a commanding stake in one of Malaysia’s largest banks, because it has never declared its Directors and Shareholders.
However, under pressure, the twenty something at the time Jho Low blabbed to the Star newspaper that both he and the wife of the Sultan of Terengganu (whose petroleum fund was later the foundation of 1MDB) were on the board and that he was a 10% shareholder, alongside two named Kuwaiti and Emirate figures, Sheikh Sabah and Yousef Al Otaiba and ‘a few others’.
According to the interview, it was not long after this, in 2008, that Jho Low claimed he was consulted by the Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank (ADCB) on whether to buy out some of EPF’s stake in RHB, which ADCB then did, taking a 25% share in the bank.
In fact, ADCB soon made moves to get rid of its shares in RHB, selling them on in June 2011 to none other than Aabar.
The Prime Minister cum Finance Minister Najib Razak was prominent at the signing ceremony for the transfer deal, as was Khadem al-Qubaisi, clad once more in flowing white attire.
Khadem signs Aabar's purchase of RHB bank share
Khadem (second right) signs Aabar’s purchase of RHB bank share with CEO Mhmd Ahmed Badawy Al-Husseiny at his side
Sarawak Report has seen strong evidence to support the conclusion that Jho Low had been closely involved in factoring this RHB deal, which involved the sale of a quarter share of a key Malaysian bank by one arm of Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth management apparatus, the Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, to another – the IPIC subsidiary Aaabar, run by al-Qubaisi.
A further forward sale of this holding was almost immediately mooted and it is currently the subject of fierce manoeuvring by some of Malaysia’s own home banks, who are seeking to consolidate control of RHB and need the cooperation of Aabar.

London hotel buy-out

Joint bid for a top London hotel group
Joint bid for a top London hotel group including Claridge’s
Therefore, it is noteworthy that at the very same time as these negotiations were being pursued in April 2011, Jho Low, 1MDB and Aabar investments were also engaged closely together in an attempt to try and buy out London’s top hotel group, Maybourne
The entire process has been detailed in a UK court judgement already cited in a previous expose by Sarawak Report.
Contrary to Jho Low’s repeated claims that he has had no business dealings with 1MDB, the British judge confirmed that his company Wynton Capital’s bid for the billion pound hotel group had received a letter backing his position from 1MDB:
“I don’t play any role in 1MDB, and I did not get compensated by 1MDB or any other government-owned entities although some blogs have mentioned that I did. That is untrue.” [Jho Low speaking to the Star 2010]
The judge also detailed that Jho Low had tried to engage Abu Dhabi’s Aabar investments into the same deal in a three way bid with the UK’s Barclay brothers, who subsequently pulled out as they were not interested in Aabar:
“The Malaysian based investor was Jho Low, a businessman with some backing from a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund. Through an entity called The Wynton Group, offers were made to the company and shareholders in January and February 2011……The provision on 15th January 2011 of a letter from 1 Malaysian Berhad, an investment vehicle wholly owned by the Malaysian government, confirming its support for the offer, did not allay the concerns of the majority of the shareholders” [Justice David Richards, Judgement pars 50 & 138]
This was all at the same time in early 2011 that Aabar was involved in buying a share in RBH bank.

Over to America

Girls and guns look
Girls and guns look

Moving forward to 2013 it appears that Jho Low was still doing business with Aabar.
Because, surprisingly, the youthful tycoon’s company Jynwell Capital stepped into a supporting role (and into the limelight) during Aabar’s purchase of the Canadian oil companyCoastal Energy, which has strong interests in the Far East.
Why Jynwell and Jho Low should have a role in this Aabar buy-out, when the sovereign wealth fund has unlimited resources to take over companies like Coastal is seemingly unclear.
However, Jho Low was publicised as a partner in the deal, through Jynwell’s subsidiary Strategic Resources (Global) Ltd.
Attractions advertised by al-Qubaisi's Las Vegas Hakkasan Nightclub
Attractions advertised by the Khadem al-Qubaisi owned Las Vegas Hakkasan Nightclub
SRG in fact holds a notably similar name to the 1MDB subsidiary later taken over by the Ministry of Finance, named SRC.
SRC also became involved in a joint venture with Aabar in December 2011 named Aabar-SRC Strategic Resources Limited.
The activities of this company, which has involved borrowing from Malaysia’s public Pension Fund to the tune of RM4 billion, has been the subject of many unanswered questions, since the accounts were removed from those of 1MDB through its transfer to the Ministry of Finance.
Why did CEPSA need Jho Low in the deal?
Why did CEPSA need Jho Low in the deal?
The joint purchase of Coastal Energy meanwhile was shouldered by Aabar’s Spanish subsidiary CEPSA, which paid out USD$2.2 billion for the company.
Low in 2010 called his family wealth 'modest', now he plays up his Grandad's billionaire business credentials and calls himself a third generation businessman
Low in 2010 called his family wealth ‘modest’, now he plays up his grandad and father’s billionaire business credentials and calls himself a third generation capitalist.
The Chairman of CEPSA, which became a full subsidiary of IPIC in February 2011 is also, incidentally, Khadem al-Qubaisi.
More recently still, Aabar has been tied in with Jho Low’s October 2014 bid for the shoe firmReebok, reported by Malaysian Government backed blogs as being funded by the Abu Dhabi fund.
According to the financial press such deals are part of a recent frenzy of complex takeovers where Jho Low has acted only as a minor investor, but as a key ‘facilitator’ for major funds in the Middle East – and that these maneouvres have turned his family into one of the richest in Malaysia.

Helping hand

Jho Low with Riza and his partner Joey McFarland from Red Granite with Wolf of Wall Street director Martin Scorcese
Jho Low with Riza and his partner Joey McFarland from Red Granite with Wolf of Wall Street director Martin Scorcese
So, is it so much of a surprise that when things got rather tough on the publicity side for Jho Low and his very dear friend, Riza Aziz, who is the son of Najib Razak, the boys from Aabar appear to have stepped in to take some of the heat?
After months of refusing to identify the anonymous backers behind Riza’s USD$100 million Hollywood production Wolf of Wall Street, his company Red Granite Pictures finally announced last August that the money behind the movie had come from none other than Mohamed Ahmed Badawy Al-Husseiny,Khadem’s CEO and right hand man at Aabar Investments.
On hand - Husseiny sits next to his boss, but did he pay for the party?
On hand – suited Mr Husseiny sits next to his boss (right), but did he pay for the party?
Yet questions clearly remain as to how Mr Al-Husseiny managed to mobilise so much personal disposable income into a risky film venture by the rookie producer, who holds such close ties to his day job?
Mr Al-Husseiny is doubtless exceedingly well paid, but his role is that of a salaried civil servant – as is that primarily of his Chairman Mr Khadem al-Qubaisi.
It leaves the assumption that there is a fuller story to be told about the actual nature of the Aabar connected investment into Red Granite Pictures growing stable of movies.

The wealthiest man in St Tropez?

Pink twin Bugatti owned in Cannes by al-Qubaisi
Pink twin Bugatti owned in Cannes by al-Qubaisi – mark KAQ
Meanwhile, the success and wealth of the Aabar Chairman himself appears to have reached dramatically ostentatious levels, particularly since 2012, where it has been creating considerable comment in France’s ever fashionable Cote D’Azure – and indeed his other watering holes, such as Las Vegas.
Al-Qubaisi is certainly referred to as a businessman as well as a salaried government fund manager.
However most of his public activities have been related to his management of official public funds in keeping with his duties at the International Petroleum Investment Company.
So, it would be interesting to know what private activities have generated an income to sustain, for example, the part-purchase of the world’s 5th largest yacht The Topaz, price tag USD$400 million?
The Topaz - the mystery buyer in 2012 was Khadem al-Qubaisi, according to reliable sources
The Topaz – the mystery buyer in 2012 was believed to be Khadem’s boss Sheik Mansour, but he too has paid tens of millions towards it
Or his purchase for USD$50 million of one of New York’s most expensive apartments in the Walker Tower?
Walker Tower - New York's top address
Walker Tower – New York’s top address
Or indeed his three grand villas on the Cote D’Azure?
The playboy version of Mr Qubaisi is also very keen on highly expensive cars and is knows to own a fleet worth millions of dollars.
Most eye-catching, according to car spotters in the South of France, has been his double Bugatti deal, twin mega-pricy Veyron Super Sports.
One is trimmed in pink and the other is blue, both emblazoned with special edition KAQ badges and with near identical Swiss number plates.
Running one of the world’s top sovereign wealth funds clearly has its perks and must present fabulous private business opportunities, which presumably are allowed under Abu Dhabi’s civil service rules.
And with such wealth to flaunt and a similar taste for nightlife, it is perhaps not surprising that Al-Qubaisi seems to have drifted into the same social set as Jho Low – after all there has been so much official business at Aabar that has touched on Jho Low’s private dealings.
Surely Jho Low was invited?
Surely Jho Low was invited?

Pop stars Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys are regular play pals of Jho Low - here they present him with an 'Angel Gabrielle Award' for his philanthropy (to champagne thirsty singers?)
Pop stars Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys are regular play pals of Jho Low – here they present him with an ‘Angel Gabrielle Award’ for his philanthropy (in the form of kindness to champagne thirsty star singers?)
It is perhaps of little surprise therefore, that the Hollywood hard party set around Jho Low, which includes Leonardo di Caprio, star of Riza Aziz’s movie Wolf of Wall Street, were to be found on the Topaz when they all came down to Brazil to watch the World Cup.
Jho Low's key pal has developed Abu Dhabi connections
Jho Low’s key pal has developed Abu Dhabi connections
Jho Low now says he introduced Di Caprio to Riza and that this was the vital role he played that inspired a special note of thanks at the end of the movie.
And, since Di Caprio promotes himself as an environmental activist, it was perhaps equally predictable that Abu Dhabi has highlighted his credentials, by recently flying him to the statein order to honour its own leadership’s environmental image.
The connection has extended further. When Aabar became the key funder for the Virgin Galatica project, Di Caprio was promoted as the star who would be leading the way on its space travel programme (presently in tatters after a Galactica disintegrated in space earlier this year).
Acting the super-hero
Playing the super-hero
Indeed, Mr al-Qubaisi’s private businesses are perfectly in tune with the interests of this Hollywood crowd, who have also become intertwined with his official activities.
These include his chairmanship of Hakkasan, a restaurant business that was started in London in the early 2000s and has now expanded globally into nightclubs following a buy out by Khaddem.
However, Malaysians will be still be wanting to know how it is that Good Star, the company controlled by Jho Low and which received nearly a billion dollars in funds channelled from 1MDB, paid out such a substantial sum to this gentleman?
This is particularly the case, given the extensive involvement of Mr al-Qubaisi’s public fund in matters to do with 1MDB and in various private ventures organised by Jho Low’s own private companies.

A SARAWAK REPORT SPECIAL INVESTIGATION