Monday, October 21, 2019

Kit Siang's previous comments on a no-confidence motion against Mahathir provide context for his Freudian slip: That Anwar Ibrahim is trying to frustrate the successful prosecution of Najib's SRC trial

by Ganesh Sahathevan




1MDB ,The Anwar Ibrahim phase: Racial conflict seems the
 next phase and consequence will be the frustration of Najib's
SRC and 1MDB trials.



As reported yesterday on this blog, while Lim Kit Siang claims  PAS and UMNO are now trying to use a " no confidence motion" against Mahathir to frustrate the successful prosecution of Najib's 1MDB trial, reports over the past year have generally pointed to Anwar Ibrahim as the instigator of numerous failed no confidence motions:




So the question that needs to be answered now:Why might Anwar Ibrahim want to frustrate Najib Razak's SRC trial?

Indeed in June this year when denying the existence of yet another Anwar led no-confidence motion the best Lim could do was this:


“As next month will prove, this motion of no confidence against Mahathir is only the creation of the fevered imagination of sinister conspirators and cybertroopers,”


This sudden need to blame UMNO and PAS is clearly meant to be distraction.So again, the question that needs to be answered now:Why might Anwar Ibrahim want to frustrate Najib Razak's SRC trial?

END 

L'affaire Adelaide: Australians call a AUD 3.7 Billion error a "typo", Asians would call it evidence of corruption

by Ganesh Sahathevan


See first

Is l'affaire Adelaide a repeat of DCNS's l'affaire Karachi-Australian taxpayers have not been told why French subs will cost 5 times more


And now see this latest report on the matter, and see how easy it is to justify misplaced billions in Australia. Asians would see this as evidence of corruption, but not here.......


Billion-dollar correction in Australia's Future Submarine budget blamed on 'typo'
Updated about 3 hours ago
A "typo" is being blamed for an apparent dramatic cost increase on Australia's most expensive defence project in history, the $50 billion Future Submarine program.

Key points:

  • The government approved a $4.9 billion injection for the 2018-19 financial year
  • About $3.7 billion was attributed to "real increases needed to fund underestimates or budget overruns"
  • A senior Defence figure said the figure was "described inaccurately", because the money had already been provisioned
According to the Defence Department's annual report released last week, the government approved a $4.9 billion injection for the project during the 2018-19 financial year, taking the total budget to date to almost $6 billion.
Further examination of the figures reveals $1.3 billion of extra funding was due to a change in the project's "scope", while a further $3.7 billion was attributed to "real increases needed to fund underestimates or budget overruns".
A senior Defence figure told the ABC the latter figure was "described inaccurately", because the money had already been provisioned to cover not only future submarine design work, but Adelaide shipyard equipment and workforce over the next few years.
In a statement, the Defence Department also conceded a mistake in the annual report and promised to publish a more accurate update.
"Defence has identified unclear labels on the presentation of the supplementary online material … as being expenditure in a single financial year," the statement read.
"The Department will release an updated table once finalised.
"To be clear, there have been no under-estimates or budget overruns for the Future Submarine Program.
"These programs will be funded through a series of progressive Government approvals — all which are provisioned within the Defence Integrated Investment Program."
Former Defence Department official Marcus Hellyer, now with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, says despite the clarification it appears the submarine program could soon prove to be more expensive than originally anticipated.
"These figures confirm that the government has now approved nearly $6 billion in funding for the future submarine program, and that only gets it to the start of construction," Doctor Hellyer told the ABC.
"Defence will spend around $750 million on the program this year and that's likely to go well beyond $1 billion a year even before construction starts in 2022-23.
"That has to be putting a lot of pressure on Defence's ability to fund other priorities."
The Defence Department said that as at 30 June 2019, expenditure on Future Submarine Design and Construction was $834.6 million, which "included the cost of design work, the science and technology program, and operational costs".
Opposition assistant defence spokesman Pat Conroy has questioned the government's handling of the program.
"The fact that Defence can't even manage to accurately report on a $3.7 billion increase in the project's budget is of real concern, especially given the fact that the Future Submarine project is already running 10 years late," he said.
"The unjustified secrecy surrounding this project is amply demonstrated by a quadrupling of the project budget first being disclosed through an appendix in an annual report.
"It is no wonder that there is little public confidence in the Government's handling of what is the largest and most complex project ever run in Australia."

Sunday, October 20, 2019

Kit Siang says the tactic of using no confidence motions to frustrate Najib's SRC trial has failed : A Freudian slip implicating Anwar Ibrahim?

by Ganesh Sahathevan



Muhyiddin, Zahid lash out at fake SDs supporting Anwar;
probe ordered-Another recent incident where Anwar Ibrahim,
not PAS or UMNO ,was said to be marshaling votes against
Mahathir




The High Court's impending decision on whether the prosecution in the SRC International trial has established a prima facie case against Datuk Seri Najib Razak is the reason behind “desperate attempts” to bring down the Pakatan Harapan government, alleges Lim Kit Siang .
The DAP adviser claimed that the Umno and PAS conspirators were desperate to cause the downfall of the government as it could no longer use the “no confidence motion” strategy to topple and destabilise the government.
“One cause of such desperation is that Nov 11 is getting closer and closer, the date the former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak will know whether he walks free or will be ordered to enter his defence on seven charges of abuse of power, corruption and money-laundering involving RM42mil of funds from SRC International.

PAS and UMNO have not the numbers to threaten a “no confidence motion”, but it is safe to say that not a day has gone by in the past twelve months in which there has not been strong speculation that "PM8" Anwar Ibrahim is marshaling the numbers for a “no confidence motion” against PM Mahathir.All attempts have failed.

So the question that needs to be answered now:Why might Anwar Ibrahim want to frustrate Najib Razak's SRC trial?

END 

SEE ALSO

Monday, July 8, 2019

Anwar Ibrahim's solid grip on MPs statutory declarations meaningless: SDs cannot be used to secure a promise

by Ganesh Sahathevan



Muhyiddin, Zahid lash out at fake SDs supporting Anwar;
 probe ordered

The denial by Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin and Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi of  having signed  statutory declarations in support of Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim taking over as prime minister beginning July 2 is irrelevant even if it were true.

A uniquely Malaysian innovation, the SD pledging support makes for good theater in the land of the wayang kulit, but otherwise means nothing. A SD is, as its name implies,  a declaration that something is true and for that reason its use is limited to declarations that say,  statements regarding ones name, identity or nationality are true. 
It cannot be used to affirm ones support, affection, undying love or loyalty. These are akin to promises, for which there are contracts or deeds.

So, even if Saudara Dr Anwar Ibrahim obtains SDs of support from all MPs, that fact would mean nothing. He would still have to go back to Parliament, move a vote of no confidence against Mahathir, who would then need to advise the Yang DiPertuan Agong  that Parliament should be dissolved and a general election called.

END 









Sunday, July 7, 2019


Anwar Ibrahim's vote of no confidence against Mahathir: GE 15 must be called, and voters will expect a solid grip on 1MDB prosecutions :Australian interference will not prevent a people's revolt

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Australian foreign policy advisers cannot understand that Anwar like his friend Erdogan will only make the ASEAN region more jihadi friendly.Instead,it is assumed that he will promote a more inclusive, tolerant (read LGBTQI++ friendly) Malaysia.


News reports, rumours and details suggest that Sdr  Dr Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim is about to make his move against PM Tun Mahathir Mohamad. It does look as if Anwar is about to do to Mahathir what he did to Ghafar Baba in 1993; present to Mahathir a seemingly united front of MPs who prefer him as their beloved leader.

It is believed that Dr Anwar's coalition will comprise both Pakistan Harapan and Barisan National MPs,for it is not felt that he will have the numbers by relying solely on Pakistan MPs. If all goes well, Anwar Ibrahim expects to be Malaysia's eight Prime Minister by the end of this week, if not very, very soon.

Unfortunately, it cannot work that way. Mahathir is PM, so a vote of no confidence against him is in effect a vote of no-confidence against the Government.A government that has lost the confidence of the majority of MPs ie the representatives of the people, must be dissolved and an election called.
To do otherwise is to have a dictatorship.

Seeking the support of Barisan Nasional Opposition MPs makes matters worse; it takes Anwar type logic to not understand that when Government MPs join with Opposition MPs to vote against the sitting Prime Minister in a vote of no confidence, Government MPs are in fact admitting that their Government has failed.Again, the only logical consequence is to call an election.

If an election is called now voters will demand that  Najib Razak and others charged with 1MDB offences be held in a solid grip, and not allowed to escape jail. There is already unhappiness with the current state of the various matters against Najib and others; call another election and voters will demand that whoever is elected show that they can do a better job of investigating and prosecuting 1MDB matters.


In this day and age foreign interference is assumed, and attempts by especially Australia to promote the Anwar-Najib cause will not go down well.

END

aturday, September 29, 2018


Australia attacks Mahathir, backs Anwar for PM: Australian interference in Malaysian elections discovered by former IGP Rahim Noor in 1994



by Ganesh Sahathevan


Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (left) and Recep Tayyip Erdogan (right) pose for a photo before a meeting in Istanbul on June 20, 2018. -AP



Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (left) and Recep Tayyip Erdogan (right) pose for a photo before a meeting in Istanbul on June 20, 2018. -AP
(see 1MDB-The Anwar Ibrahim phase (Coming soon, ask UMNO and PAS about it)



The Australian Government agency that produced the document that contains this statement continues to stand by its finding:
43.It is reported on https://www.thethirdforce.net/ganesh-sahathevan-rpk-clare-brown-ginny-stein-and-the-blood-money-trail/ that Mr Sahathevan was investigated for blackmail, extortion, bribery and corruption defamation


The "Thirdforce" story suggests that then opposition leader Tun Mahathir  financed this writer and others in  a scheme to fabricate false allegations against then PM Najib Razak with regards 1MDB.

The suggestion is expressed in    this linked Thirdforce story:
Which is why, you now have fellows like Ganesh Sahathevan telling you that Trump was forced to expand his powers just to resolve the 1MDB issue. Ganesh was paid USD1 million by a member of team Mahathir to float the idea (READ FULL STORY HERE) while Kit Siang prepped the Red Bean Army (RBA) with one-liners that accused Trump of being anti-Islam.


The Australian Government has made no secret of its preference for Najib and Anwar over Mahathir and the above seems to be an attempt to exonerate Najib , discredit Mahathir, and pave the way for "PM in waiting" Anwar Ibrahim's ascendancy to the prime ministership.

Australia has done much over the years to nurture Anwar in whatever way possible (a story for another posting) but that should not surprise. In 1994 former Chief Of Police Malaysia Rahim Noor discovered that the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) had  recruited members of the then opposition to undermine the Malaysian government  of the day.See stories below.

END



News; International News
Proof Of Opposition Spying For ASIS - Malaysian Police
168 words
3 February 1994
The Age
9
English
Copyright of John Fairfax Group Pty Ltd
Kuala Lumpur, Wednesday. Malaysian police had uncovered evidence to support claims that opposition politicians spied for the Australian secret service, the top police officer said today.
The Inspector-General of Police, Mr Abdul Rahim Mohamad Noor, said preliminary investigations had uncovered the evidence, the national Bernama news agency reported.
He did not disclose details but said police had set up a committee to investigate.
The `Sunday Telegraph' in Sydney on 16 January quoted former agents of the Australian Secret Intelligence Services (ASIS) as saying they paid senior opposition politicians in Malaysia and Singapore without Canberra's knowledge or consent.
Mr Lim Kit Siang, the leader of the largest opposition Democratic Action Party (DAP), has described the allegations as ``preposterous''.
``ASIS must be very stupid to be recruiting agents from the opposition as I cannot imagine what secret information DAP leaders could lay their hands on which would be of use to the Australian spies,'' he said. _Reuter
Document


Malaysia
Australia unwilling to help in graft probe, says KL
325 words
15 May 1994
Straits Times
English
(c) 1994 Singapore Press Holdings Limited
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia could do very little about Australia's unwillingness to co-operate with a police investigation into allegations that Australian spies bribed politicians here, Law Minister Datuk Syed Hamid Albar said yesterday.
"If they don't want to co-operate or do not want to allow us to take evidence, then it is within their right not to do so," he told reporters after talks with visiting Iranian Oil Minister Gholam Aghazadeh at his office here.
Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Abdul Rahim Noor was quoted as saying on
Friday that police had been denied permission by the Australian government to interview editors and reporters about the allegations.
Australia's Sunday Telegraph in January quoted former agents of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (Asis) as saying that they paid senior opposition politicians in Malaysia from the time they were junior members of Parliament, without Canberra's knowledge or consent.
The Canberra Times weighed in with a report several weeks later saying that Asis had paid politicians from the ruling National Front coalition government up until four years ago.
"We would suggest that it would be better for countries that have made allegations against a country to allow that country to get to the bottom of the allegations so that the truth will prevail," Datuk Syed Hamid said.
He added that the co-operation of the Australian government would enable the
government to investigate the allegations and, if necessary, to take action against the parties involved.
"The investigation will identify which opposition party is involved and whether there is any criminal act to enable us to take action," the Law Minister said.
Malaysia and Australia have only recently smoothed over a row that began whe n Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating called his counterpart, Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir Mohamad, a "recalcitrant" for boycotting a summit of Pacific Rim nations last November. - Bernama, Reuter.
Document STIMES0020050711dq5f03tls



LPAB's Zhu Minshen-Top Group review requires investigation:Peter Hall refuses to do so, adding to the loss of confidence in this ICAC Commissioner. He should step down

by Ganesh Sahathevan



ICAC Chief Commissioner Peter Hall will head an inquiry that involves NSW Labor.

In his current inquiry into Chinese donations to the Labor Party ,ICAC Commissioner PeterHall QC(picture above) seems reluctant to go anywhere near the matter of Zhu Minshen and his Top Group,whose
donations to the NSW Liberal Party may have consequences for Hall's former colleagues at the NSW Bar and Bench who manage the Legal Profession Admission Board, the body that has provided Zhu the status of a law school vice chancellor.
Peter Hall's appointment as ICAC Commissioner was not without controversy. 
New ICAC commissioner Peter Hall worked closely with Roger Gyles — who led his selection panel



ICAC Commissioner Peter Hall's failings in handling the current ICAC inquiry into Chinese political donations has already been the subject of much adverse public comment.

From Neil Chenoweth, of the AFR:

The disconcerting feature of NSW's remade anti-corruption body, as it tackles its first major donations scandal, is its determined lack of curiosity.

From this writer:

Peter Hall QC and ICAC have been provided information about Top Group by Dr Amen Lee, but ICAC will still not call Zhu Minshen



Meanwhile, Zhu continues to receive the approvals he needs from the NSW Legal Profession Admission Baord, despite not providing vital financial information,and despite financial issues which would be of concern to students, current and past:




Hall is probably both conflicted and lacking in the skills required for this type of work.He should resign.
END 

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Scott Morrsion to Mahathir: Australia will not be part of the international 1MDB investigation because...............

by Ganesh Sahathevan



Australia has a history of undermining Mahathir 


Australian PM Scott Morrison is expected to have a one-to-one meeting with Malaysian PM Mahathir in Jakarta when both attend the inauguration of Indonesia's President Joko Widodo today.


While Malaysian PM Mahathir has made it clear that Australia has not done ng to investigate ANZ Banking Group Ltd's central role in the 1MDB theft.

One wonders what excuses Morrison is likely to provide Mahathir, but here are a few:

Australia will not investigate ANZ;its chairman is our most revered David Gonski 

This 1MDB thing involves China, and Australia will never ever upset Chinese money

I , Scott Morrison, cannot afford to upset the Turnbulls ,not even young Alex

Some of our most senior Attorneys General think there was no theft, and that you made paid ABC Four Corners to broadcast a false story about poor Mr Najin stealing from 1MDB

END
See also 


The Banking Spin Starts?  Commentary

The Banking Spin Starts? Commentary

Australia’s Malcolm Turnbull will be acting host to his special Australia-ASEAN Special Business Summit next weekend.  And lining up to shake his hand will be Malaysia’s PM Najib Razak, thirsty for another photo-op that he can propagandise back home as ‘validation’ that he is not tarnished by his 1MDB mega-thefts.
Donald Trump came to regret his own encounter with Najib last year, prompting Theresa May to impose a news blackout on his subsequent UK visit with no pictures released until the dodgy kleptocrat was back out of British airspace.
Now Turnbull’s act of apparent realpolitic (who cares if Najib is a thief if some of the cash being bled out of Malaysia comes our way?) appears to be starting to give him similar problems.  This businessman turned banker turned politician has found himself facing some uncomfortable criticism and questions over the scandal, which has in the past days reached into his own family and his own past.
Many in Australia have long questioned why the country’s regulatory authorities have done absolutely nothing to investigate let alone punish their own ANZ Bank for its horrendously ‘lax’ management of its effective subsidiary, AmBank, which poured billions of stolen 1MDB cash into Najib’s personal accounts in the run up to the last general election?
All the top personnel at AmBank were seconded from ANZ Bank – its CEO, COO, compliance and risk chiefs – indeed that was one of the big selling points for the Malaysian bank.  Until, 1MDB broke, of course.  At that point, ANZ started changing its tune and distancing itself, claiming that contrary to previous announcements the Australian HQ had no control or direct oversight of the Malaysian bank, of which it was the largest shareholder.
Questioned by MPs the heads of ANZ came up with the lamest of answers and excuses, which ought to have had the regulatory authority pouncing.  However, ASIC (the authority concerned) has done nothing.  It has treated 1MDB with greater imperviousness than the three proverbial deaf, blind and dumb monkeys, whilst those senior figures responsible at AmBank have swanned back off to other high paying (and extremely responsible) jobs in Australian banks.

Malaysian Ties Coming Back To Haunt Turnbull?

This matter has been questioned, most consistently by a Malaysian local financial blogger, Ganesh Sahathevan, who has asked time and again why Australia has been so determined to be blind over this banking scandal of such enormous proportions?  He has pointed out that Prime Minister Turnbull is an ex-Goldman Sachs man and so is his son.
Goldman Sachs was the bank that originally raised the US$6.5 billion in bonds, much of which ended up in Najib’s bank accounts in KL just two days after the bond offer was completed.  The commission charged by the bank was outrageous and the subject of gossip almost from inception (nearly $600 million in total) – indeed, Sarawak Report was the first to expose the truth of that gossip when we published information on those bond issues back in 2013, just as Najib was winding up his hot AmBank accounts.
Sahathevan last week once again raised the fact that at the time Malcolm Turnbull’s son Alex was working in the very department that negotiated that deal with Malaysia and ought therefore have got an extremely nice bonus as a result. Was that the money Turnbull Jnr had used to move on from Goldman and set up his own hedge fund, Sahathevan had again publicly asked?  And was this the reason nothing was happening in Australia over 1MDB?
Moving from business to politics is always a tricky manoeuvre, especially if there are less than transparent areas from his past that the subsequent politician appears reluctant to fully discuss – as the present President of the United States is finding out. Likewise, observers are equally, and doubtless again unfairly, reflecting that the Prime Minister of Australia’s seemingly over-easy stance towards corruption in present day Malaysian government could also be linked to his own ties to Malaysian logging businesses.
Turnbull made his initial fortune not by brilliant ‘rocket science banking’ activities as a Goldman ‘Master of the Universe’, but by activities such as plain old tree felling in the lawless and appallingly corrupted context of the Soloman Islands – one of the under-reported environmental tragedies of our time.  He was the Chairman of one of the rapacious companies, Axiom, that razed that paradise to the ground in no time flat back in the 90s, a job primarily financed by Malaysian connected timber concerns of the most corrupted and ruthless variety.
Axiom was registered through a complext network of off-shore companies and was eventually bought out by a Malaysian concern registered in the BVI – one of those convenient black holes designed by our present finance system to allow dirty money and its ownership to be disguised.  Of course, it is entirely possible that all the owners and buyers in these particular transactions were in fact completely honest and above board and just chose for reasons of their own to hide themselves.  But how are we to know since Mr Turnbull isn’t telling much about his time in the Solomon Islands and the details are lost in off-shore finance?
We may wonder why governments around the world are allowing that sort of thing, but it doesn’t take long to figure out, when you consider the facts of the matter, does it?
What Malcolm Turnbull has put on the record about this episode in his career is that as Chairman of the company he simply wasn’t down there doing any dirty dealings on the ground and he has insisted that in fact he was doing his darndest to bring in more responsible practices into the Soloman Island logging business, whilst so prominently engaged in it.  He has described himself as a corporate doctor:
“Responding to the issue at the time, Mr Turnbull told ABC radio that he had had no hands-on role in the logging operations on the Islands.
Describing himself as a “corporate doctor”, Mr Turnbull said that after he saw the consequences of poor forestry he had tried to encourage local owners to change their ways. Mr Turnbull said he was unaware the companies had been described as having some of the worst logging practices in the world.
He said he was aware of some companies having “difficulties” and that Axiom had acquired them to clean up the mess.
The vision of the founders of Axiom, of which I was not one, was to acquire these logging companies and then restructure them and sort of reposition them so that they became sustainable operations,” Mr Turnbull said. “My only involvement with the company was as a corporate doctor.”
This is encouraging confirmation that the Australian PM’s heart is in the right place…. but the fact of the matter remains that the Soloman Islands got razed, the people got trashed and Malcolm Turnbull got rich.  He took on the profits of his early business career to become a partner in Goldman Sachs, focusing on South East Asian business before eventually cashing out as a very rich man indeed to take on the rather different sort of challenge of running Australia.
One assumes that after a lifetime of dealing with the Malaysian establishment he retains a lot of friends in positions of power in that country and has plainly not been too peturbed over the years by the blatant nature of the corruption that has characterised the BN regime, destroyed the Borneo Jungle and in the process violated indigenous rights and employed armies of trafficked labour (including North Korean slave labour) in palm oil plantations.
Perhaps, some are surmising, this is why the present Australian government is less than squeamish when it comes to the fall out from 1MDB or shaking the hand of Najib Razak? After all, what makes for good business often makes for sticky politics.

Son Alex

At which point Turnbull’s son Alex has come up with the same sort of justification that his Dad has been employing over the Soloman Islands.  Alex wasn’t prepared to sit quiet and listen to Sahathevan question his bonus like that – it wasn’t fair.  So, he has gone public to say that yes, he was in the Goldman Sachs team over in KL, but he had called out the whole scam and was sidelined as a result. His career as a Master of the Universe pretty much over for not being enough of a crook to stomach the deal of the century.
So he left Goldman, calling himself a whistleblower who sees himself as punished by the outcome (as opposed to rewarded by the sort of bonus that the rest of us would retire on).
Dad says he is not commenting.  However his PR advisors will doubtless now be sweating over the best form of damage control, as Najib’s proferred hand comes ever closer as the days go by.

ASIC Boss Also A 1MDB Goldman Player!

Because, Alex’s outburst has re-opened another Sahathevan theme of recent months that the Australian hierarchy has done its best to ignore as well.  The new boss of Australia’s banking regulator is one James Shipton, who was none other Goldman’s head of government and regulatory affairs in Asia at the time those dodgy bonds were negotiated.
Sahathevan has surmised that Shipton would have got a juicy bonus too, as the guy who ultimately okay’d the deal.  However, interestingly, just as the rumours were exploding during the aftermath of the Malaysian election in 2013 about that 1MDB slush fund and the Goldman commission on the bonds, Shipton decided to quit banking just like Alex.
He took the modestly low key position by comparison as executive director of the licensing division of the Hong Kong Securities regulator.  That is an important job, but there are unlikely to be the sort of bonus packages built in to normally tempt a high flying Goldman guy. Shipton then went on to do a stint in academia, before landing his Australia top regulatory job last October.
Rudely, Sahathevan has been asking what chance remains now that the role of Australia’s banks in that particular scandal will be investigated?
Remember, just two days after Goldman raised the money on the last of three enormous bond issues US$681 million plopped straight into Najib’s accounts in KL and no one has yet explained to any level of satisfaction the grounds on which Goldman decided that the unseemly rush to raise that $3,5 billion bond (the excuse for demanding such a high payment) was appropriate.
Let’s go through it.  Najib had embarked on March 12th 2013 on a purported programme to fund a massive building project over coming years on a site in KL – the so-called Business Exchange.  For this 1MDB had set about raising the US$3.5 billion. Yet, instead of such an enormous project proceeding at the normal stately pace, Najib had insisted he needed ALL THE MONEY up front by 21st March 2013 – that is, by the end of the very same month!
Goldman did it in the time and took the risk, says the bank, which is why it charged the huge premium.  But, since there was no realistic reason for needing to raise the money that quickly (unless for the illegitimate, criminal, ulterior motive of funding the impeding election for BN) why did Mr Shipton allow his bank to engage in such a stink of rotten fishy sort of deal?
He is unlikely to sign a paper that starts any kind of investigation into finding out why during his tenure at ASIC.  So why did the Turnbull government appoint him?

The Banking Spin Starts?

So, are we seeing the slow but deadly fight back of the Masters of the Universe – the global banking community, who weathered the devastating crash they caused without a single slap on the wrist to any of them?
It looks likely.  Alex Turnbull also revealed in his welter of self-justification last week that he has ‘told all’ to the authors of an up-coming book on 1MDB by journalists from the Wall Street Journal.  Presumably, the book will exonerate him in return for his ‘whistleblowing’.
More concerning is who else this book plans to exonerate, as more details of the line it plans to take have started to emerge.  We are being told in the growing PR around the book that this aims to be a ‘Michael Lewis-style thriller’ about how a single bad-boy pulled of the heist of the century (using Sarawak Report’s original headline on 1MDB).
It is being intimated that the ‘fast-paced read’ will detail how this wide-boy from Penang gulled the world’s banks and waltzed past auditors and regulators with a breath-taking audacity and skill that has left all these worthy institutions gasping with astonishment and embarassment.
Sarawak Report is concerned by this line of spin, little of which goes to the truth and relevance of 1MDB.  This blog and the likes of Ganesh Sahathevan have put in years of effort into exposing 1MDB and related scandals for a very good global reason.
This episode does not owe to the supposed brilliance of Jho Low, far from it.  As the bloated party boy himself has said he was just one of many such operators, who do the work of people like Najib in Malaysia and elsewhere.  KAQ from Abu Dhabi was another – their reward is to become fabulously rich in the process.
However, the truth is that the amateurish and ridiculous antics of this ostentatious young playboy were as easy to read as as primary school book, as those who have followed this scandal will know.  Anyone who has read his series of letters to various banks providing ludicrous, even hilarious excuses for needing to layer hundreds of millions around the global banking system will know they represented transparent fraud.
What counts here is the deliberate and systematic failure by numerous banks, lawyers, accountants, auction houses, PR people, regulators and the like to call out his blatant money laundering.  And we should not let them off the hook by pretending they didn’t know and that Jho Taek Low was the brilliant operator who deceived them all.
1MDB is a scandal that Sarawak Report, followed by regulators in the US and Switzertland and Singapore, has taken the time and energy to expose, but its real importance lies in the fact that it represents the weakness of a global financial system that allows the vast majority of our global wealth to transit through dark pools of off-shore secrecy, enabling the super-rich and dirty politicians to disguise the sources of their wealth (and avoid taxation at the same time).
The Australians have elected themselves a PM who for obvious reasons is unexpected to want to take action on that matter.  So, for now, have the Americans and the British. However, the public are largely unaware, because newspapers rarely flag up the problem either (look who owns them and who pays for their advertising).
We need to call out the bankers and all the other players and not write up excuses for them.  Jho Low deserves a just and painful punishment, but he ought not to be the scapegoat for 1MDB. His boss, who is Malaysia’s corrupt leader, and all those who were ready to do business with him, need to be held to account as well.