PKR strategy director

Deepak’s ‘Black Rose’ to be released as ebook

Carpet merchant Deepak Jaikishan’s book The Black Rose will be released as a free ebook beginning tomorrow.

At a press conference in Kuala Lumpur today, Deepak said he will release details on how the public can download the book tomorrow.

The book is expected to chronicle his involvement with a VIP’s wife in allegedly coercing private investigator P Balasubramaniam into retracting his statutory declaration in 2008.

Deepak was supposed to have launched the book at the press conference today, but decided against due to legal reasons.

“The objective of today’s press conference is about the book launch as well as the details of my transactions on the land that is sold to Boustead Holdings Bhd.

“But due to the nature of the exposé made by (PKR strategy director) Rafizi Ramli late this afternoon, I have been advised by my solicitors to sit still until (we) reply to Rafizi,” he said at a press conference today.

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Deepak’s ‘Black Rose’ to be released as ebook

Carpet merchant Deepak Jaikishan’s book The Black Rose will be released as a free ebook beginning tomorrow.

At a press conference in Kuala Lumpur today, Deepak said he will release details on how the public can download the book tomorrow.

The book is expected to chronicle his involvement with a VIP’s wife in allegedly coercing private investigator P Balasubramaniam into retracting his statutory declaration in 2008.

Deepak was supposed to have launched the book at the press conference today, but decided against due to legal reasons.

“The objective of today’s press conference is about the book launch as well as the details of my transactions on the land that is sold to Boustead Holdings Bhd.

“But due to the nature of the exposé made by (PKR strategy director) Rafizi Ramli late this afternoon, I have been advised by my solicitors to sit still until (we) reply to Rafizi,” he said at a press conference today.

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RM40mil fund: PKR reports Musa, Nazri to MACC

PKR lodged a report on the RM40 million that came in from Hong Kong, alleging the involvement of Sabah Chief Minister Musa Aman and Minister in Prime Minister’s Department Nazri Aziz, with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) today.

NONEThe report against Musa and Nazri was made because they are suspected of being linked to the money that was brought into the country by businessman, Michael Chia, PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli (left) said.

The RM40 million is said to be a donation to Sabah Umno.

“A MACC report has been made and I request MACC to open a file to investigate the case on Musa Aman and Michael Chia, as well as on Nazri and his son (Nedim Mohd Nazri).

“According to the MACC Act, there is a basis for it to start its investigations,” Rafizi told a press conference before entering the MACC building in Putrajaya this afternoon.

‘Nazri should go on leave’

Rafizi also requested that Prime Minister Najib Razak order Nazri to take leave from cabinet while the investigations are being carried out.

“This is because he is the minister in charge of the MACC,” adding that he will give the agency his full cooperation.

“The MACC is responsible for resolving this matter. I am prepared to give evidence to them,” he said.

Rafizi added he will go to Hong Kong next week to continue the investigation.

“We are still communicating with certain parties. I do not want to mention any names as this is a high profile case.

“I’m worried that the government will contact the relevant embassies and this will complicate matters. I will make an announcement when it is confirmed,” he added.

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RM40mil fund: PKR reports Musa, Nazri to MACC

PKR lodged a report on the RM40 million that came in from Hong Kong, alleging the involvement of Sabah Chief Minister Musa Aman and Minister in Prime Minister’s Department Nazri Aziz, with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) today.

NONEThe report against Musa and Nazri was made because they are suspected of being linked to the money that was brought into the country by businessman, Michael Chia, PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli (left) said.

The RM40 million is said to be a donation to Sabah Umno.

“A MACC report has been made and I request MACC to open a file to investigate the case on Musa Aman and Michael Chia, as well as on Nazri and his son (Nedim Mohd Nazri).

“According to the MACC Act, there is a basis for it to start its investigations,” Rafizi told a press conference before entering the MACC building in Putrajaya this afternoon.

‘Nazri should go on leave’

Rafizi also requested that Prime Minister Najib Razak order Nazri to take leave from cabinet while the investigations are being carried out.

“This is because he is the minister in charge of the MACC,” adding that he will give the agency his full cooperation.

“The MACC is responsible for resolving this matter. I am prepared to give evidence to them,” he said.

Rafizi added he will go to Hong Kong next week to continue the investigation.

“We are still communicating with certain parties. I do not want to mention any names as this is a high profile case.

“I’m worried that the government will contact the relevant embassies and this will complicate matters. I will make an announcement when it is confirmed,” he added.

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Banks and Bank Negara have a fiduciary duty

Banks and Bank Negara have a fiduciary duty

What exactly is meant by fiduciary duty? Fiduciary duty, according to a law dictionary, simply means an individual in whom another has placed the utmost trust and confidence to manage and protect property or money. It stems from the Latin fiducia, meaning “trust,” a person (or a business like a bank) who has the power and obligation to act for another (often called the beneficiary) under circumstances which require total trust, good faith and honesty. To ensure the upholding of their fiduciary duty, banks in Malaysia are bound by a solid framework of best practices determined by Bank Negara Malaysia. It’s known as the Banking and Financial Institutions Act, 1989 (BAFIA) wherein lie the terms of reference on how banks and financial institutions shall operate to the highest integrity in their fiduciary duty. Fabiani Azmi still has many questions to ask…
 

In recent weeks, more attention has been drawn to BAFIA than ever before since PKR Strategy Director Rafizi Ramli was charged in the sessions court on 1 August for violations of the Act. It began on 7 March this year when Rafizi made public, at a news conference, the confidential information of 21 bank accounts belonging to companies and individuals. He did so illegally without the permission of the account holders, the bank or Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM). Police reports were lodged in March and April, and complaints were also filed with both Public Bank Berhad and BNM.
 

Despite BAFIA being in place to protect the security of bank customers’ information and transactions, there were obviously weaknesses in which the opposition was able to pry, spy or buy. Banks have a fiduciary duty to protect and safeguard the information in their custody and many, like top-class, award-winning Public Bank, even have a client charter and a privacy policy in place to guarantee customers of their fiduciary duty.
 

What is the promise by Public Bank Berhad to its customers? Its client charter specifically states, “We highly respect and thoroughly appreciate your concerns on the privacy and security of all personal information and financial transactions handled by us. We will employ the tightest security architecture to prevent unauthorised access and ensure your peace of mind concerning all your transactions with us. We will pursue the strongest form of preventive and punitive measures against any party which attempts to compromise your right to transaction security and confidentiality.” 
 

It would appear that Public Bank has failed on these accounts. Notably, it has failed to demonstrate that it “will pursue the strongest form of preventive and punitive measures against any party which attempts to compromise your right to transaction security and confidentiality” for it failed to take action against the main culprit, Rafizi Ramli, who had infiltrated its systems and exposed its customers’ confidential information to journalists. Why Public Bank has yet to take action against Rafizi is puzzling. The strongest punitive measure has just been to investigate the bank clerk. The bank did not even have the chance to fire him. The bank clerk resigned.
 

If it were not for Rafizi, there would really be no blatant abuse of the bank and BAFIA. Rafizi, with his passion for dramatics, wielded and distributed the documents to chalk up his political points – much to the detriment to the sterling reputation of award-winning Public Bank Berhad. 

 

So how did a bank clerk gain access?
 

It is very puzzling that a bank clerk with no access to privileged customer information was able to extract confidential data. There are concerns if serious weaknesses exist. If there are, would our wealth be equally vulnerable to prying hands – stolen at the click of a mouse?

 

One can only deduce that there are more senior people behind the BAFIA breach than just a mere clerk. Could tellers, officers, managers, branch managers, regional managers, general managers right up to the executive directors have had a hand? Did any of them collude to provide a back door for the bank clerk to pry into the 21 bank accounts? Were there opposition sympathisers from within the bank? Enquiring minds would really like to know. 

 

The plot can get quite convoluted. Let’s suppose a senior bank official well-connected with the opposition did go into cahoots with Rafizi. He might have given the access password to the bank clerk to print. Having done so, the information is then passed to Rafizi. But because the customer complained of the leak to the bank and BNM, internal audit and security had to investigate. The audit trail would point to the terminal that was used to download the information. CCTV cameras would focus in on the perpetrator. Such evidence cannot be ignored or dismissed. Internal auditors work independently, reporting only to the very top echelons in the bank. Public listed companies like Public Bank Berhad would have their internal auditors report directly to the Board Audit Committee. So the clerk is apprehended and interrogated by the bank and BNM. His handphone is seized. He denies wrongdoing. He says he had no access as he is only a clerk. So the plot must go deeper into how he managed it. Was it really the bank clerk? Or is he just a smoke screen to something more devious?

 

The bank has confirmed in its Privacy Policy Statement that there is limited employee access. Section 1.3 reads, “The PBB Group maintains stringent procedures authorising only such employees as are strictly relevant or required to access the Customer’s information on a need-to-know basis. The PBB Group’s employees have been educated on the Customer’s right to privacy and confidentiality. Any breach by the employee of the PBB Group’s policies would subject the employee to such disciplinary action as the PBB Group may consider appropriate.” 
 

This would certainly suggest that there is obviously someone else senior in the bank that has committed the heinous crime to violate the customers and betray the bank through his privilege and access. It just wasn’t the bank clerk on a solo mission. It just couldn’t be. He had no privileged access.
 

BNM may have been misled by the bank and even by Rafizi into believing it was just the clerk. In a 14 May news conference organised by the opposition, Rafizi tried to shift blame and public perception on the BAFIA breach to the bank clerk, claiming the bank clerk was the whistleblower. Why only the clerk when he had no access? One needs to ask, is there a lot more going on than BNM initially suspected?
 

Section 2 of the bank’s Private Policy Statement reads, “In accordance with strict compliance to the Banking and Financial Institutional Act 1989 (BAFIA), and apart from the sharing of information between members of the PBB Group, the PBB Group will not disclose the Customer’s information to any third party or external organisations.”
 

BNM governor Tan Sri Dato’ Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz was also clear on this when she said, “The confidentiality of customer information is clearly protected by the Banking and Financial Institution Act 1989 (BAFIA).”
 

Zeti said it s only when there is a suspected offence under federal law or if there is a court order or where a customer has given consent, that relevant law enforcement agencies are authorised under the law to obtain information. This information must be obtained through Bank Negara Malaysia, and if the central bank says there is no foundation for it, the information will not be given.
 

With BAFIA in place and an excellent governor at the helm, the central bank has earned much respect in the international arena for the country’s banking and financial system. Dr Zeti was recently named by Global Finance magazine as one of the World’s Best Central Bankers over the past year. Zeti was one of the six heads of central banks adjudicated with an “A” in the Central Banker Report Card. She also achieved an “A” last year and also in 2010. Such credibility should not be eroded by breaches of BAFIA whether by individual clerks or banks themselves. Obviously, the rules have been flouted. One wonders why BNM has not come up with punitive action against the bank for failing in its fiduciary duty. Taking action against the bank’s clerk is not enough.
 

The law dictionary adds, “A fiduciary relationship encompasses the idea of faith and confidence and is generally established only when the confidence given by one person is actually accepted by the other person. Mere respect for another individual’s judgment or general trust in his or her character is ordinarily insufficient for the creation of a fiduciary relationship. The duties of a fiduciary include loyalty and reasonable care of the assets and in this case, information within their custody. All of the fiduciary’s actions are performed for the advantage of the beneficiary.”
 

Complete faith by the customer
 

On this note, the customer has placed his complete faith in not only the bank, but in Bank Negara Malaysia as well. BNM acts as the regulatory body and chief custodian of the country’s banking and financial system, and is also the implementer and enforcer of BAFIA.
 

Therefore, BNM has an obligation to serve and protect the interests of customers and investors in this country. Action must therefore be seen to be taken not only against the bank clerk and Rafizi Ramli, but against the bank too. And BNM can do so under the terms of reference provided in BAFIA.
 

As Lincoln Inn graduate Sri Maniam recently commented, “Privileged financial information is the cornerstone of a solid financial market and any leakages no matter how well intended — would only create distrust in the system especially by foreign investors.”
 

While waiting to hear from BNM on their next steps, it would be interesting to hear if other banks have failed you in their fiduciary duty, a question the silence from BNM prompts one to ask. How serious would this be? Is it rampant? Nothing much has been reported on the BNM Enforcement Action page on their web site. The cases pertain mostly to illegal deposit taking, anti-money laundering and anti-terrorism activities.
 

So many questions remain unanswered. It would be good to know if alarm bells need to be sounded louder. 

 

About the Writer
 

Fabiani Azmi is an avid reader of The Mole and the blogs. He believes the world’s mysteries can be solved. And it does not warrant a paleontologist to investigate.

Source: MOLE

Lawbreakers cannot be lawmakers

Lawbreakers cannot be lawmakers

A flurry of lashback surfaced after PKR Strategy Director Rafizi Ramli was charged in the Shah Alam Sessions Court for contravening the provisions of BAFIA when he disclosed customer bank account profiles. He had colluded with a bank employee to steal protected information that was subsequently distributed to a roomful of reporters. Rafizi and his Robin Hood ways while sounding a nice fairy tale did not amuse Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM). They shot him a string of charges. Fabiani Azmi investigates the scene of the crime.

  

In thirteen minutes, one could see the crime of Rafizi Ramli in its entirety. Cameras tell no lies. Only Rafizi did. MalaysiaKini.TV provided the evidence here.

 

Yes, Rafizi went to great lengths to expose 21 confidential bank accounts of companies and individuals, providing a running commentary and a concocted perception that hefty loans had been taken by NFCorp directors on the merit of a RM71 million government deposit in the bank. At his news conference on 7 March, Rafizi distorted and misrepresented facts. He lied that NFCorp chairman Datuk Seri Dr Mohd Salleh Ismail had taken massive loans for KL Eco City office units when none were taken. He was unaware that the bank had written to cancel its loan offer on 4 January 2012 and went on to paint an ugly mirage of falsehoods to the peril and detriment of others.

 

At a subsequent news conference on 14 May, Rafizi introduced his accomplice, one Johari Mohamad, a bank clerk who had been accused of extracting the confidential bank customer information. Johari, we are told, had been interrogated to his wits by both his employer Public Bank Berhad and BNM. It reached a point that Johari resigned his job. Again, MalaysiaKini.TV provided the evidence.

 

Given the evidence and the statements, Bank Negara Malaysia came down on Rafizi like a ton of bricks. Five policemen and five BNM officers did a dawn raid. BAFIA provisions are very clear. And they had been flouted. The Act says it clearly:

 

Secrecy

97. (1) No director or officer of any licensed institution or of any external bureau established, or any agent appointed, by the licensed institution to undertake any part of its business, whether during his tenure of office, or during his employment, or thereafter, and no person who for any reason, has by any means access to any record, book, register, correspondence, or other document whatsoever, or material, relating to the affairs or, in particular, the account, of any particular customer of the institution, shall give, produce, divulge, reveal, publish or otherwise disclose, to any person, or make a record for any person, of any information or document whatsoever relating to the affairs or account of such customer.

 

97. (3) No person who has any information or document which to his knowledge has been disclosed in contravention of subsection (1) shall in any manner howsoever disclose the same to any other person.


While some quarters were riled by the BAFIA charges, the Association of Banks in Malaysia came out to articulate that client confidentiality or secrecy must be upheld at all costs.

 

The Association’s Chairman, Datuk Seri Abdul Wahid Omar, said it was a fundamental aspect of a bank-customer relationship. “It forms the main pillar of integrity and confidence in the banking system. It must be preserved and cannot be compromised,” he said.

 

Wahid was also quoted to have said to NST, “Banks, not just in Malaysia but worldwide, have zero tolerance towards any breach of banking secrecy. We will not hesitate to dismiss any employee found to have breached banking secrecy provision immediately.”

 

The video clip by MalaysiaKini.TV provided for contrasting remarks by Rafizi, Johari and PKR Vice President N Surendran. First, Rafizi introduced Johari Mohamad as the whistleblower. Johari on the other hand was quick to mutter he was NOT a whistleblower – helped along the way by PKR vice president N Surendran to underscore that fact.

 

One moment this is the whistleblower, the next he isn’t. The unorganised news conference of the opposition begs the question: is there a whistleblower or is there no whistleblower?

 

Surendran then added that it was an act to expose the massive wrongdoing of NFCorp, “We have a situation where someone, the whistleblower, has revealed to the public, huge cheating and misappropriation of public funds to the tune of two hundred and fifty million.”

 

So here Surendran confirms there is a whistleblower.

 

But documents extracted by Johari and given to the media by Rafizi weren’t about huge cheating and misappropriation of public funds. They were merely bank balance summaries of private loans taken by individuals for properties in 2005 and 2008, long before NFCorp was established. There was never any whistleblowing to begin with. Rafizi dramatised the bank balance summaries to for political mileage.

 

Nevertheless, the distribution of the documents meant very clearly that Rafizi did commit a violation of BAFIA. And Johari Mohamad had abetted him. Together, they had schemed to expose the bank accounts under the guise of whistleblowers. Awkwardly, they ended up getting caught for their unlawful actions.

 

BNM governor Tan Sri Zeti Akhtar Aziz would not have allowed a prosecution based on flimsy investigation and evidence gathering. The central bank would have been quite thorough. As a result, BNM and the AG are determined to nail the two in court. This is a 100% violation of BAFIA.

 

In underscoring the violation, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak added, “Anyone in possession of confidential financial information relating to corruption must relay it to the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) instead of releasing it to the public, which will run them afoul of the law.”

 

It looks like a rocky road for Rafizi and Johari. So much evidence from the video clips piled against them. Even as their lawyer N Surendran tried hard to suggest wrongdoing by NFCorp, there isn’t anything devious from those bank balance summaries. The evidence is clear cut that Rafizi and Johari had broken the law.

 

Today, both claimed they are victimised whistleblowers that should be protected under the Whistleblower Protection Act 2010. To fall under this provision, one needs to prove that the disclosure contained elements of improper conduct. Bank documents given by Rafizi however show none.

 

As an expert close to those who drafted the Whistleblower Protection Act said, “Looking at the players involved in this drama it is clear that the actions of Rafizi and the people coming to his defence are clear examples of manipulation of the letters of the law to suit one’s political agenda.”

 

Rafizi believes he is morally right when in actual fact, he is legally wrong. This is akin to one stealing from your bank account to feed the poor.

 

“The action of the people coming to his defence in claiming that he is a whistleblower victimised for being a member of the Opposition, despite knowing that he did not come with clean hands, is also a clear case of manipulating and distorting the provisions of the law to confuse and influence the public, or rather, pretending to be ignorant of the letters of the law or just plain stupidity on their part,” the aforementioned expert said.

What this all adds up to is that we can’t have such lawbreakers for lawmakers.

 

About the Writer

Fabiani Azmi is an avid reader of The Mole and the blogs. He believes equations are simple to solve. One plus two certainly equals three. 

 

Source: MOLE

Whistleblower Act cannot save Rafizi

Today, Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and the Attorney General leveled charges against PKR Strategy Director Rafizi Ramli and a bank employee for violating the Banking and Financial Institutions Act, 1989 (BAFIA). The charges were read at the Magistrate Court of Shah Alam in relation to the illegal disclosure of banking information of several companies and individuals. Critics say the case will put whistleblower protection laws under greater scrutiny. Fabiani Azmi quickly reads up the Whistleblower Protection Act 2010. He discovers that Rafizi and Johari may not be saved.


First, the charges read out in court today stated that Rafizi Ramli had violated Section 97(1) of BAFIA when he disclosed four customer account profiles detailing the balance summary of National Feedlot Corporation Sdn Bhd (NFCorp), the National Meat and Livestock Sdn Bhd, Agroscience Industries Sdn Bhd and NFCorp chairman Datuk Seri Dr Mohamad Salleh Ismail, to two individuals identified as Yusuf Abdul Alim and Erle Martin Carvalho.

 

A video clip by MalaysiaKini.TV taken of a news conference of 7 March that Rafizi gave in concert with Ampang MP Zuraida Kamaruddin and PKR Vice President and Lembah Pantai MP Nurul Izzah Anwar, confirms the BAFIA violation. Seeing is believing. (http://www.malaysiakini.tv/video/23239/more-properties-in-bangsar-bought-by-nfc-directors.html)

 

The clip showed Rafizi had exposed the bank documents to infer that the directors of NFCorp had leveraged on a RM71 million deposit to procure funds from a bank to purchase eight office lots at KL Eco City in Bangsar.

 

He went on to discredit the chairman saying he was not credit worthy as he had paltry sums in his personal bank accounts. Rafizi also went on at length to analyse the documents citing force sale values of KL Eco City properties.

 

Ultimately, Rafizi announced quite a mouthful in violation of BAFIA. To wrap it, he had also distributed hard copies of the confidential bank documents to a roomful of journalists as takeaways.

 

This obviously underscores the magnitude of his BAFIA violation that Bank Negara Malaysia took a very dim view of.

 

There is now a clamour among critics that the whistleblower protection act must come to protect Rafizi. What exactly does it say? What does it provide? Can Rafizi be protected under the act?

 

The Whistleblower Protection Act 2010 was formulated as “An Act to combat corruption and other wrongdoings by encouraging and facilitating disclosures of improper conduct in the public and private sector, to protect persons making those disclosures from detrimental action, to provide for the matters disclosed to be investigated and dealt with and to provide for other matters connected therewith.”


Whistleblowers need to observe a strict procedure on the methodology when disclosing information. Disclosures need to be communicated with the appropriate enforcement agency or a body established by Federal law such as the MACC and certainly not journalists. 

 

Unfortunately for Rafizi, the bank documents that he distributed to the media were customer account profiles detailing the balance summary. The statements are on private loans taken in 2005 and 2008 as evidenced by the news release given.

 

There is really nothing suspicious or incriminating about it – no money laundering, no irregularities – just plain bank account summaries. In short, there were no wrong doings. Just pure sensationalism, seasoned journalists would size.

 

Rafizi deliberately distorted and misrepresented the documents and NFCorp. He lied on the loans and insinuated wrong doings when there were none.

 

Section 11 states among others says, “The enforcement agency shall revoke the whistleblower protection conferred under section 7 if it is of the opinion, based on its investigation or in the course of its investigation that – the whistleblower wilfully made in his disclosure of improper conduct a material statement which he knew or believed to be false or did not believe to be true; and the disclosure of improper conduct is frivolous or vexatious.”

 

Section 21 of the Whistleblower Protection Act 2010 on the penalty for making false statement states that Any person who willfully makes in his disclosure of improper conduct or complaint of detrimental action a material statement which he knew or believed to be false or did not believe to be true commits an offence.”

 

Any person who commits an offence under this Act which no penalty is expressly provided shall, on conviction, be liable to a fine not exceeding twenty thousand Ringgit or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years or to both.

 

MP Tony Pua said, “the government has chosen to exact revenge on the whistle-blower Rafizi”. Selangor MB Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim added Selangor would pay for Rafizi’s legal expenses.

 

Hasn’t Rafizi resigned from his post as CEO of the Selangor Economic Adviser’s office last June?

 

Strangely neither Pua nor his comrades have spoken up for the bank employee Johari Mohamad who was bailed out by his brother.

 

When one looks at how Rafizi operates, breaking the law to champion an issue, it does not make for wrongdoing right. He ought to have been smarter to examine the ramifications. Rafizi who is trained accountant should have known better but it baffles why he would break the law.

 

The BAFIA violation will prove hard hitting for Rafizi. When the hammer comes down, the penalty is a RM3 million fine and a three-year jail term or both.

 

‘Syabas holding back water treatment payment’

Selangor water concessionaire Syabas has held back payments to water treatment plants for six to seven months, with the arrears growing to some RM2 billion, PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli claims.

NONE“Syarikat Bekalan Air Selangor Sdn Bhd collects money from you and me; it collects money from our families, but it withholds this money,” Rafizi (right) told a forum in Subang Jaya last night, without naming the creditors.

He told the audience of at least 600 people that the Syabas move was to manufacture a water crisis in a desperate bid to help Umno retake Selangor in the next general election.

While this problem continues, he added, Syabas CEO Rozali Ismail continued to live a ‘superstar lifestyle’ on an RM5 million annual salary, despite the state having the highest rate of non-revenue water in the country.

“If Rozali is going to withhold payment to the water processing plants in order to incapacitate them and to create a water crisis in Selangor, the least he could do is to forgo his RM5 million (salary) a year.

azlan“Agree or not?” Rafizi asked, to which the audiece responded with a resounding ‘yes’.

Syabas is one of four water supply concessionaires in Selangor and deals primarily with the distribution of water.

The other three are Syarikat Pengeluar Air Sungai Selangor (Splash), Konsortium Abass Sdn Bhd and Syabas’ parent company Puncak Niaga Sdn Bhd.

Last night’s forum was the second and last part of a series on the Talam debt settlement issue, with the first conducted in Chinese on the night before, and the second forum conducted earlier, in English.

Chua Tee Yong: Forum a diversion

MCA Young Professionals Bureau chief Chua Tee Yong, who had alleged that the Talam debt restructuring was in fact a Selangor government bailout for Talam, was invited to debate at both forums, but he did not turn up.

NONEEnglish daily The Star yesterday quoted Chua as saying that the forum was a diversion.

“It is not MCA that should attend the forum but the Selangor government. One thing I learnt from this whole episode is that DAP will continue spinning, even when it is wrong,” Chua is quoted as saying.

In Chua’s absence, forum panellists Rafizi, DAP national publicity chief Tony Pua and Subang Jaya assemblyperson Hannah Yeoh also touched on Selangor’s water issues, in addition to explaining the Talam issue.

Rafizi lauded Selangor Menteri Besar Abdul Khalid Ibrahim’s move to consolidate the debts Talam owed to three state subsidiaries under Menteri Besar Incorporated, saying that it meant increasing the priority of the debt repayment.

azlanHe explained that should Talam have incurred the debt as a result of failed joint ventures with state subsidiaries and should it be liquidated, its debts would be given the least priority by the liquidators.

The liquidators would first settle any debt owed to the banks, and then to the other creditors before finally dealing with the joint-venture companies involved, Rafizi said.

“(The purpose) is to change the status of the debt from owing to a joint-venture to a full creditor… once you do this, then the rank of the debts would be ‘upgraded’,” he said.

If Chua was truly interested in ensuring that the people’s money is well-spent, he should use his status as deputy minister of agriculture to “find all those cows, so that we get back our money”.

Rafizi said this in reference to another scandal that he played a major role in exposing, where the National Feedlot Corporation (NFC) is accused of abusing a RM250 million government soft loan meant to develop the nation’s cattle industry.

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Posted by
on Jul 26 2012. Filed under News.
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Rafizi’s blog comes under cyber attack

PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli’s blog page came under cyber attack today, in what he believes is a direct reaction to his exposures about the Ampang LRT extension project.

After being alerted to the matter by Netizens on Twitter, Malaysiakini attempted to access his site.

NONEWe found Rafizi’s blogsite had been hacked and its contents erased, giving a ‘page not found’ warning. The page was also flagged as a malicious attack site.

“I have contacted my service provider who confirmed that it was an attack and they are looking at what they can do about it,” Rafizi confirmed with Malaysiakini when contacted.

“It’s too much of a coincidence. (Prime Minister) Najib (Abdul Razak) is jittery, I think. You guys also got attacked. I think all the sites that ran the story got attacked.”

He was referring to series of cyber attacks targeted at Malaysiakini, several news portals and the party websites of Pakatan Rakyat members PAS, DAP and PKR.

Rafizi added that in the interim, he has put up an alternate blog at http://rafiziposthackingblog.wordpress.com to host his expose.

He recently exposed what he claimed to be undue interference by the PM in the award of the Ampang Line LRT extension project, though Najib has countered that everything is above board.

Rafizi’s latest posting on his blog prior, to the attack, called the investigation  against him under the Official Secrets Act (OSA) for exposing Finance Ministry documents on the project as an indication of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak feeling the heat over the emerging RM1 billion scandal.

His blog also carried other posts related to his expose and documents that he said back up his claims.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=36616







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on Jul 5 2012. Filed under Main News.
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Rafizi’s blog comes under cyber attack

PKR strategy director Rafizi Ramli’s blog page came under cyber attack today, in what he believes is a direct reaction to his exposures about the Ampang LRT extension project.

After being alerted to the matter by Netizens on Twitter, Malaysiakini attempted to access his site.

NONEWe found Rafizi’s blogsite had been hacked and its contents erased, giving a ‘page not found’ warning. The page was also flagged as a malicious attack site.

“I have contacted my service provider who confirmed that it was an attack and they are looking at what they can do about it,” Rafizi confirmed with Malaysiakini when contacted.

“It’s too much of a coincidence. (Prime Minister) Najib (Abdul Razak) is jittery, I think. You guys also got attacked. I think all the sites that ran the story got attacked.”

He was referring to series of cyber attacks targeted at Malaysiakini, several news portals and the party websites of Pakatan Rakyat members PAS, DAP and PKR.

Rafizi added that in the interim, he has put up an alternate blog at http://rafiziposthackingblog.wordpress.com to host his expose.

He recently exposed what he claimed to be undue interference by the PM in the award of the Ampang Line LRT extension project, though Najib has countered that everything is above board.

Rafizi’s latest posting on his blog prior, to the attack, called the investigation  against him under the Official Secrets Act (OSA) for exposing Finance Ministry documents on the project as an indication of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak feeling the heat over the emerging RM1 billion scandal.

His blog also carried other posts related to his expose and documents that he said back up his claims.

Short URL: http://www.freemalaysiakini2.com/?p=36616







Posted by
on Jul 5 2012. Filed under Main News.
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You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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