Saturday, November 2, 2019

Australian government agencies continue to ignore 1MDB issues and to discredit work of journalists pursuing 1MDB theft, despite growing international cooperation to recover the funds

by Ganesh Sahathevan

Deafening Silence Out Of Australia Over 1MDB's Connection To Top Bank ANZ
While there has been a "Deafening Silence Out Of Australia Over 1MDB's Connection To Top Bank ANZ",Australian government bodies have been more than willing to discredit the work of journalists and governments that have been instrumental in exposing what is the biggest case of kleptocracy ever


The US Department Of Justice issued a press statement last week to announce the recovery of some USD 900 Million for the Malaysian fugitive Jho Low. The DOJ thanked specifically a number of enforcement agencies:


The Department also appreciates the significant assistance provided by the Attorney General’s Chambers of Malaysia, the Royal Malaysian Police, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, the Attorney General’s Chambers of Singapore, the Singapore Police Force-Commercial Affairs Division, the Office of the Attorney General and the Federal Office of Justice of Switzerland, the judicial investigating authority of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and the Criminal Investigation Department of the Grand-Ducal Police of Luxembourg.



Absent from the list are Australian enforcement agencies, despite the pivotal role played by Australia's ANZ Banking Group Ltd in the theft, and evidence of 1MDB linked assets being held in or managed out of Singapore.



Meanwhile, an Australian statutory board, the NSW Legal Profession Admission Board, which is chaired by the Chief Justice Of NSW, Tom Bathurst, and under the purview of the Attorney General NSW Mark Speakman, continue to maintain that this story from "Thirdforce" and "Malaysia-Today" is true:

Ganesh Sahathevan, RPK, Clare Brown, Ginny Stein and the blood money trail


They have done so despite their actions being the subject of a story published in Australia's only national daily,The Australian, on 17 January 2019.

They have in fact gone further to discredit as untrue, false, misleading or exaggerated stories by this writer on the 1MDB matter and on all the personalities involved, despite  this writer's publications being confirmed by evidence being now produced in court, and DOJ court filings. The Chief Justice and the AG consider the persons investigated and written about with regards the 1MDB issue to be "eminent persons" who have been "defamed".

It  was initially assumed that  Australian agencies were attempting to protect ANZ Bank, one of this economy's so called "4 pillar" banks.However the NSW AG Mark Speakman's attempts to discredit as well this writer's publications about the Kestrel Group of off-shore companies, and the Top Group affair, suggest that factions within Australian state and federal governments are concerned about any investigation into offshore entities, for reasons best known to them.

END 

Friday, November 1, 2019

1MDB asset recovery: Malaysia does not have to "make a claim",and the DOJ will take steps to ensure the USD 1 Billion recovered from JLow is returned to the people:Guan Eng & advisers should not interfere

by Ganesh Sahathevan







DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng.See again Good of Guan Eng to warn Malaysians of the "deep state who undermines the administration and cohesiveness of PH" but what of the the faceless ones within the MOF from the 1MDB linked KPMG and other consultancies ?


CNA and others have reported: 


Malaysia will make a claim over 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) assets in the United States following a settlement by the United States Department of Justice (DoJ) involving the recovery of the fund's assets.

Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad said on Thursday (Oct 31) that part of the 1MDB money had been used by Jho Low to buy assets in America, estimated to be worth US$600 million.


“He (Jho Low) has now surrendered ... Therefore, DoJ now holds and freezes the assets that were bought with Malaysian money.

“We had proof he is using Malaysia’s money to buy the asset and we will now make a claim (over the 1MDB assets) to the American government,” Dr Mahathir said.


The statement above is a bit perplexing for the entire DOJ action, under the United States' kleptocracy regime, is premised on the theft of money from the people of Malaysia. The recovery and repatriation of funds stolen from the people by their leaders and banked or invested in the US is the purpose for being of the kleptocracy regime.

There is therefore no need for Malaysia to "make a claim" for something that US laws recognise is the property of the Government and people of Malaysia.


All that remains is a mechanism for the repatriation and here of course the Ministry of Finance and its advisers and consultants may get frustrated for the DOJ might not see things their way and decide instead to return the money to the people via UN or World Bank programmes. 

SA Chief Justice Kourakis terrorism decision makes Dutton's surveillance laws a necessary evil

by Ganesh Sahathevan










































The US NSA Uses Social Network Analysis To Map Terrorist Networks.Terrorist 
nodes within them.





The ABC reported:


A former Adelaide student found guilty of being a member of Islamic State (IS) has had her conviction overturned on appeal, despite the state's chief justice accepting she had pledged allegiance to the terror group.

Her legal team argued there was no evidence presented at trial about the organisational structure of IS and how a person might become a member and, therefore, no evidence that Ms Abdirahman-Khalif had taken steps to do so.

They also argued that the trial judge's summing up to the jury was unbalanced and failed to present the defence case.

Three judges presided over the appeal, Chief Justice Chris Kourakis, Justice Trish Kelly and Justice Greg Parker.

The chief justice said the evidence at trial supported an inference that Ms Abdirahman-Khalif was a supporter of IS, its extremist ideology and its terrorist activities.

"It also supported the inference that she intended to travel to Turkey to make contact with members or supporters of Islamic State in Turkey, with the intention of travelling into areas of Syria, Iraq and Turkey … for the purposes of either providing medical assistance to fighters and others or to marry an Islamic State fighter," he said.


However, Mr Kourakis  said the prosecution did not produce evidence about IS's organisational structure or membership.

"No evidence was adduced on how members were recruited or selected, or of any process by which they were inducted and finally accepted into the organisation," he said.

"Other than references to [IS leader Abu Bakr] al-Baghdadi's autocratic rule and to several of his immediate subordinates, there was no evidence about Islamic State's decision-making processes or command structure



"There was therefore no evidence against which to evaluate any connection between the proved conduct of the appellant, her communications, pledge of allegiance, singing and attempt to travel to Turkey, with formal or informal membership of Islamic State."

Jihadi organisations like IS comprise independent cells; look for an "organisation" is often impossible, as is any search for "command structure". Jihadi networks comprise nodes and links (see article below) and this decision by Kourakis  will require prosecutors in future cases to provide evidence of the nodes and structures in order to prove structure and decision making processes. Current surveillance laws may not allow this, and the expanded spying
powers reported to have been proposed by Peter Dutton are probably the remedy.

END









The Problem Of Passive Supporters Of Jihadi Terrorists And The Putin Solution

by Ganesh Sahathevan
While I have previously taken a top-down approach to describing the networks that support  jihadists (see http://gsahathevan.blogspot.com/2018/11/structures-for-support-of-muslim_83.html) , the proliferation of Al-Qaeda franchises and off-shoots, such as those at work in Syriai requires that a bottom-up , or grassroots, approach be adopted.
While the top down approach looked at the support states provided jihadists, the bottom-up approach is concerned with how individuals at the grassroots can comprise networks that jihadists might rely on for their activities. Civil rights activists might be alarmed by such language, afraid that large sections of a given population could be branded jihadists, but there is in fact a theoretical framework and empirical  evidence to support this hypothesis.
Juan José Miralles Canals ii describes these types of networks using a mathematical and computer modeling approach:
Passive supporters of the jihadist cause are normal people who do not need to express their position explicitly. They just do not oppose a jihadist act in case they could. They are sharing independently an identical opinion of identifying with the jihadist cause. They do not need to communicate between then. This is an individual dormant attitude associated to a personal opinion. It does not need to be explicitly so. They are unnoticeable, and most of them reject the violent aspect of the jihadist action.
Social permeability to the jihad describes the physical pathways that nodes of the jihadist networks can establish and use to move freely and safely along, thanks to the passive supporters of the jihadist cause.
Social permeability to the jihad  describes the physical pathways that nodes of the jihadist networks can establish and use to move freely and safely along, thanks to the passive supporters of the jihadist cause.
Canals provides a mathematical analysis which concludes that disruption at the nodes is required to disrupt jihadists activities. Given what was seen in Iraq, and now Syria ,and well before these, Gaza, of apparently innocent non-combatants supporting the jihadists' cause, it does appear that Cannals theoretical perspective has and is being borne out in the real world.
I have previously written about the relevance to this day of the British Malaya administration's policy of new villagesiii, used to defeat the Communist Party Of Malaya, which while being financed by the Peoples' Republic Of China, relied heavily on the support of local Chinese to facilitate their activities on the ground.
That solution may today seem inhumane, but critics conveniently forget that lives were saved by that solution. Be that as it may, Russian President Vladimir Putin might have provided an alternative , a middle path:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed into law the controversial bill ….amending the Criminal Code to expand the number of offenses classified as terrorism and require the relatives of people deemed to have committed acts of terrorism to pay financial compensation for the material damage they causediv.
Not unexpectedly Putin's law has already come under criticism. However it is suggested that critics should rather see this law as the basis for other similar policy instruments that might be used to curb acts of terrorism. Either that, or a return to the new villages.

END
ii Fourth-generation warfare: Jihadist networks and percolation
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0895717709001526
iii http://www.terrorfinance.org/the_terror_finance_blog/2007/04/ending_support_.html
iv Russia To Hold Relatives Of 'Terrorists' Financially Responsible For Material Damage
http://www.rferl.org/content/russia-terrorism-law-terrorists-financial-liability/25157756.html


Thursday, October 31, 2019

Singapore will plant more trees to battle climate change; but Singapore has yet to model tree falls that have caused fatalities ,despite having the data to do so.

by Ganesh Sahathevan



click to enlarge

For each tree pictured on the PRIME interface, NParks stores additional 

information about its size, species, health, and trimming history



Singapore's Straits Times has reported:
Singapore's plans to tackle climate change will include nature-based solutions such as restoring its mangrove areas and planting thousands of trees, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Masagos Zulkifli said yesterday.
While it has mentioned engineering options before, this is the first time the Government has officially said that nature-based solutions to deal with climate change are on the cards.
Mr Masagos underscored the seriousness of the threat posed by climate change, calling it an existential challenge that nations could not afford to ignore. "Otherwise, citizens will take their cause to the streets and reason will fail to rule," he said, in his strongest comments on the subject to date.

However, Singapore is also known for trees that fall and kill, especially given its tropical storms .Climate change theory states that storms will become more frequent and intense as the Earth heats up,so one can expect more trees to be uprooted and cause even more fatalities
Storms will happen and trees will fall ,  but Singapore is probably the only country in the world that has the data required to determine where each and every tree will fall as a result of wind and soil erosion (caused by wind, water and displacement: Singapore, you see has actually catalogued every tree in a massive GIS database of some half a  million trees. 
With that type of data it is then quite easy to forecast where trees might fall, and act accordingly.This is a simple and relatively cheap exercise which has not been undertaken. Meanwhile, as with most of the climate change debate, the emphasis in Singapore has been on grand plans costing hundreds of billions that will , in the style of Marvel super heroes, save Singapore and the world.
END



Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Amen Lee is part of Top Education Group's Controlling Shareholder Group: Fresh questions for NSW LPAB,AG Speakman ,and NSW Libs over issuance of Top's LLB license and political donations ; Peter Hall's position at ICAC increasingly untenable

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 Peter
Hall 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.


While Liberal Party donor Zhu Minshen has been, this far, the focus of attention with regards Top Education Group and its license to issue LLB degrees, f Dr Amen Lee, former Executive Chairman of the Australia China Trade, Economic and Cultural Association's (ACETCA), appears to have had an equal even if less prominent role in the matter.

In August this year Amen Lee told ICAC:

"If I do attend these (fundraising) events they are paid for by Top Education or ACETCA. I have not and would not attend as an individual," Dr Lee said. Top Education is a company of which Dr Lee said he was a director and shareholder.


Top's 2019 Annual Report includes these disclosures: 

 The Company made history as it founded the very first Law School within a private higher education institute when both TEQSA and NSW LPAB officially accredited its degree program in Law.

Members of the Controlling Shareholders Group are parties acting in concert and on 13 October 2017, they entered into a confirmation deed to, among others, confirm that they have been acting together with an aim to achieving decisions at general meetings of the Company on a unanimous basis. Members of the Controlling Shareholders Group are the founding Shareholders or have invested in the Company at an early stage. Dr. Zhu and Mr. (Amen) Lee are the members of the Controlling Shareholders Group. As at 30 June 2019, all the members of the Controlling Shareholders Group together controlled 855,468,000 Shares. Under the SFO, each of Dr. Zhu and Mr. Lee is deemed to be interested in the Shares beneficially owned by the other members of the Controlling Shareholders Group.



As at 30 June 2019 Zhu controlled 38.16% of Top's shares, while  Amen Lee controlled 33.46%. 



The above suggests that there is some overlap between Top Group and ACETCA.
All of the above raises many questions as to who else supported Top's introduction into state and federal political ,and legal circles.


The LPAB and the AG Mark Speakman have refused to answer any questions about the license issued Top Group. In addition ICAC chairman Peter Hall has refused to call Minshen Zhu as a witness to the ongoing inquiry into Chinese political donations, despite Amen Lee's testimony. Hall would be required to call Zhu, and those responsible within the LPAB, which is chaired by the Chief Justice of NSW Tom Bathurst, and overseen by the AG, MArk Speakman. 
Hall's position is as chairman of the ongoing inquiry and of ICAC seems increasingly untenable. He should resign.
END 

Monday, October 28, 2019

Good of Guan Eng to warn Malaysians of the "deep state who undermines the administration and cohesiveness of PH" but what of the the faceless ones within the MOF from the 1MDB linked KPMG and other consultancies ?

by Ganesh Sahathevan



DAP secretary-general Lim Guan Eng.
FreeMalaysia Today has reported, quoting Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng:


“We must remain vigilant against those who openly wish to replace PH by undemocratic means or by those in ‘deep state’ who undermines the administration and cohesiveness of PH,“ he said and reiterated the party’s support for Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad and the transition plan which would see PKR president Anwar Ibrahim take over the reins at an unspecified date.

Meanwhile the issues raised in the story below remain unanswered:



Thursday, March 14, 2019


Malaysia's Minister For Finance appoints KPMG partner as "Special Officer",despite KPMG's contribution to 1MDB's losses

by Ganesh Sahathevan

ooi title
ooi2Kok Seng is the Partner-in-Charge for KPMG Northern Region.  He has extensive audit, accounting and consulting experience both in Malaysia and Washington, D.C., USA. His experience is not limited to audit assignments but also covers the various corporate exercises which include corporate advisory on initial public offerings, cross border acquisitions, special issues and share valuation.
He currently sits in the Penang State Shared Services and Outsourcing and Creative Multimedia Content Council.
 (see http://aamc2015.usm.my/index.php/2-uncategorised


KPMG's _proudly boast on their website:

Special officer to the finance minister, Dato’ Ooi Kok Seng, who was also present, had mentioned that the government had not yet received the funds from a one-off special dividend from Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) of RM30 billion which will be used for tax refunds announced during Budget 2019. “At the moment the funds are not in as it is only a few days past the new year. However, [the public] should not worry as the finance minister has given the assurance that full refunds will be made through the special dividend,” he said.

Dato’ Ooi Kok Seng is KPMG Head (North).He seems to have won the favour of the Penang Government and the DAP, despite KPMG's 1MDB history.This excerpt from the DAP website is indicative of their relationship:

The Penang state government has chosen the internationally renowned accounting firm, KPMG and its senior partner Chartered Accountant Ooi Kok Seng, for the verification exercise and to formulate the template and presented to the public. As an independent audit firm, KPMG is required to uphold the highest standards of professional standards ensuring that it complies with the principles of objectivity, independence and no conflict of interest before undertaking any task.


KPMG's contribution to 1MDB's losses has been well documented by this writer and by Sawarak Report (see stories below).

This conflict adds to that concerning PwC, Goldman Sach's auditor for some 37 years, who have nevertheless been appointed to oversee 1MDB.

END




Don't Ask Us! - KPMG Global's Astonishing Response on 1MDB

Don't Ask Us! - KPMG Global's Astonishing Response on 1MDB

1MDB is not anything to do with us - Global Chief of KPMG, John Ve
1MDB is not anything to do with us – Global Chief of KPMG, John Veihmeyer
For weeks the mantra of the chairman of 1MDB’s governing Advisory Board (Malaysia’s Prime Minister) has been that the management of the fund has been ‘cleared’, because the accounts were ‘forensically’ audited by international accountancy firms of global standing.
The firms who have given 1MDB clean bills of health have been the Malaysia branches of the accountancy giants Deloitte and KPMG.
Malaysia's top team at KPMG - no accountability to HQ?
Malaysia’s top team at KPMG – no accountability to HQ?
However, last week Sarawak Report demonstrated evidence pointing to a series of sharp practices on the part of KPMG during the audit process for the year ending March 2010.
These enabled 1MDB to conceal the loss of USD$700 million, which was the sum siphoned out of its joint venture with the little known oil company PetroSaudi.
Following this expose, the Sydney-based Malaysian investigative financial journalist, Ganesh Sahathevan, directly challenged the Global Chairman of the company, John Veihmeyer, to give his response to the allegations.
Sahathevan asked whether KPMG Global had been aware of any of the transactions relating to 1MDB outlined in the expose?  He added that:
“much of what has been reported was in the public domain since at least 2014, and hence there is also the question of why the Global Board took no action despite that fact?”
KPMG's international image - a massive global firm
KPMG’s international image – a massive global firm
The rapid response Sahathevan received from KPMG merits reading in full, because it puts paid to any assumptions that a local branch of this ‘global network’ of accountancy firms can be relied upon to maintain any sort of acceptable standard laid down by a central authority.
The General Counsel (top lawyer) for Mr Veihmeyer states that the corporate headquarters has no involvement in the matter, because the KPMG network represents nothing more than a ‘Swiss Cooperative’ of happy Helvetic brand sharers.
In short, he explains, no one at HQ is responsible for what their fellow franchise holders get up to. They are just there to help and advise when required.
Dear Mr Sahathevan
I refer to your email below addressed to Mr John Veihmeyer, Global Chairman, KPMG International Cooperative (KPMG International).
I am the General Counsel of KPMG International and am responding on behalf of Mr Veihmeyer.
KPMG International is a Swiss Cooperative. Member firms of the KPMG network of independent firms are affiliated with KPMG International. KPMG International provides no client services. No member firm has any authority to obligate or bind KPMG International or any other member firm vis-à-vis third parties, nor does KPMG International have any such authority to bind or obligate any member firm.
KPMG International does not have any relationship with, or connection to, 1MDB”.
Yours faithfully
Tom Wethered
Malaysians and others, who had assumed that accreditation by KPMG represented some form of guarantee of high standards; quality control; centralised monitoring and disciplinary process to ensure high standards of accountancy practice must therefore stand disappointed.
According to KPMG’s top legal eagle, theirs is a form of franchise that has its cake and eats it at the same time.
Name bearers get to carry the brand, but without any form of accountability whatsoever:
“nor does KPMG International have any such authority to bind or obligate any member firm” [Tom Wethered]

Franchise without accountability?

If a Malaysian were to find dog meat in his McDonald’s burger in KL, he would expect to receive some response from the company HQ from under its golden arches in California – and doubtless he would.
By contrast, if KPMG Malaysia assists in the cover-up of a billion dollar heist of public money, it turns out that their global HQ in Amsterdam merely refers you to the cantons of Switzerland and their company’s new corporate structure, which is accountability free.

Having their cake and eating it 

Mr Wethered’s response that “KPMG International does not have any relationship with, or connection to, 1MDB”  represents a stark contrast, however, with the firm’s own publicity material.
The KPMG website and numerous articles make reference instead to the guarantee of quality that their brand lends to its affiliates across the world.
KPMG’s own website, under the banner line “Acting With Integrity”, declares:
“KPMG is a global network of professional firms providing Audit, Tax and Advisory services. We have more than 155,000 outstanding professionals working together to deliver value in 155 countries worldwide.”
On the other hand, scrutiny of this KPMG website soon makes plain that behind the fine words and sentiments there is indeed what appears to be a significant dearth of actual governance in this corporate structure:

ABOVE ALL, WE ACT WITH INTEGRITY

We are constantly striving to uphold the highest professional standards, provide sound advice and rigorously maintain our independence….
The KPMG Global website concedes that its Head Officers provide policies, even regulations. But, there is no mention of enforcement.
The Global Board is the principal governance and oversight body. The key responsibilities of the Board include approving long-term strategy, protecting and enhancing the KPMG brand, and approving policies and regulations
There is no single line of accountability within the organisation.

Leadership

Internationally, the affairs of KPMG are the responsibility of several bodies.

Aspirations, but can they be enforced?
Aspirations, but can they be enforced?
The controls that would lead the third party readers of its audit reports to feel comforted that quality control is enforced, appear to be missing, as indicated by the letter sent by KMPG’s top counsel.
Although there is a deluge of information about the values and quality that this network of affiliated firms is “striving to achieve”, there seems to be a lack of clear accountability within the structure of the organisation.
Without accountability and enforcement structures the high values and claims of integrity that pack out KPMG’s corporate messaging are surely effectively meaningless?
What better example than this latest abdication of responsibility over the scandal of 1MDB?

KPMG’s Positive PR

The legal counsel of KPMG seems therefore to be entirely correct in his statement that the global headquarters can wash its hands entirely of this little fracas over in Malaysia.
Star Interview with former Global Head Michael Andrew presented a very different state of affairs.
Star Interview with former Global Head Michael Andrew presented a very different state of affairs.
Yet, as Mr Sahathevan and others suggest, this is not the public face of the company.
Certainly, the ‘Swiss Cooperative’s’ corporate PR does not accurately represent this state of affairs and basic lack of governance.
Take for example the recent ‘Up Close And Personal’ article by Malaysia’s Star Newspaper about the role of the recently retired Global Chairman of KPMG.
In his interview Mr Andrew told the Star that clients in KL had the right to expect the same level of service as in Europe.
He also said that the company upheld its “duty to the broader community”:
KPMG’s brand, Andrew says, is all about being independent and objective because the firm and its employees has a public interest of responsibility to the broader community.
“We have to ensure that we uphold the governance standards in every country for our multi-national clients. They expect the same standards in Kuala Lumpur as they do in Johannesburg, Frankfurt or New York,” he says.
He adds that corporate governance defines the KPMG brand. “If we don’t meet the governance standards, then people won’t have confidence in our business. Integrity is at the heart of everything we do.
“This is ensuring that we understand that our duty is to the broader community than just to any particular client or particular transaction. Because if we do some work, which turns out to be incorrect, it’ll affect our global brand,” he says.
Every three months, KPMG employees are required to sign a declaration to maintain their independence around their audit clients. [The Star Online 10th Aug 2013]
However, despite that commitment to the broader community, in the case of 1MDB the public was never informed about the siphoning of $700 million in public funds out of the fund, thanks to KPMG Malaysia’s accountancy practices.
And now it turns out that KPMG Global regards itself as having no responsibility at all in the matter.
Were it to be more widely recognised that KPMG Global exerts so little quality control over its branches, the reputation on which this ‘cooperative’ relies might very well lose a lot of its lustre.

Husband & wife concern "China Matters" would not be taken seriously in Asia, but in Australia it has high level government support- Australian policy makers have clearly not heard of Lee Kuan Yew's Suzhou Experience

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Late Lee Kuan Yew inspecting the construction of the Suzhou Industrial Park





Australia's Shadow Treasurer Chris Bowen has proudly declared on his website:

Today I’m leaving on a 4 day trip to Beijing, China to discuss a range of economic matters.

Over the course if the trip I am meeting with a range of academics, China policy specialists and representatives from global international organisations such as the International Monetary Fund.

This includes meetings with Jia Qingguo, Professor and Dean of the School of International Studies at Peking University and Dr Chu Shulong, a US-China relations policy expert.

I will also participate in a Roundtable on China’s international outlook, hosted by Dr Wang Huiyao, Founder and President of Centre for China and Globalization, the largest independent global think tank in China,


The trip is sponsored by the public policy initiative “China Matters” and I will be accompanied by the founding director and Chief Executive Officer of China Matters, Linda Jakobson.







China Matters appears to be a family affair. Its website is registered in the name of one Chris Lintz (see record below) who states on his Linkedin profile:


Currently assisting my wife Linda Jakobson with her public policy initiative China Matters Ltd. Please see www.chinamatters.org.au for more details.

Specialties: China representative office management and establishment of representative offices in China. Fluent in Chinese (Mandarin). Extensive knowledge of China's machinery industry and oil & gas industries; industrial standards in China for the machinery industry, oil & gas industry and power sector (including nuclear).

Ms Jakobson's views on business with China are in the usual "must do more to trade with China, and must understand China better to ensure Australian commercial prosperity".

Some examples:



......Australians are missing opportunities because of reluctance to invest in China. Despite the fact that the consequences of China’s economic transformation have been apparent for a decade, Australia’s economic relationship with China continues to be largely transactional (resources or food products are shipped to China). Xi Jinping’s reforms merely reinforced goals set by his predecessor: to make growth consumption-driven rather than investment-led and reliant on the services sector rather than manufacturing. The overwhelming majority of Australia’s GDP derives from the services sector, but services only comprise about 20% of Australia’s exports


These views would be treated with derision by most Asian businessmen(many of them ethnic Chinese from Malaysia, Singapore)who have been venturing into China since at least the mid-90s. Their experiences have not been happy, and many would not today consider that they are "missing opportunities because of reluctance to invest in China'". Lee Kuan Yew's Suzhou Industrial Park was one of the most high profile examples of why any business would prefer to forego these "opportunities".

It is strange that the likes of Chris Bowen and other policy makers would rather ignore LKY's experience and choose instead the guidance of  consultants like "China Matters" when it should be obvious that profit seeking businessmen gambling their own money are likely to have better intelligence of these missed "opportunities".

END







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