Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak
Tuesday replaced his deputy premier and sacked his attorney general amid a
growing scandal that threatens his hold on office.
Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, who has been critical of Najib’s
handling of the scandal involving state-owned development company 1Malaysia
Development Berhad (1MDB), was replaced, Najib said in a televised address.
State-run Bernama news agency said the premier also sacked Attorney
General Abdul Gani Patail, who was involved in investigations into corruption
allegations related to the Najib-linked company.
The prime minister and 1MDB have vehemently denied any wrongdoing.
Muhyiddin had repeatedly lent his weight to mounting public calls for
Najib to answer allegations that hundreds of millions of dollars of 1MDB money
had gone missing in complex overseas transactions that have never been fully
explained.
Najib appeared to allude to Muhyiddin’s criticisms in announcing his
replacement.
“Any difference in opinion is not supposed to be expressed in an open
forum, which is against the concept of collective responsibility in the
government,” Najib said.
Muhyiddin was replaced by current Home Minister Zahid Hamidi, Najib
said. Najib has come under mounting pressure over the past year amid a
drip-feed of allegations related to 1MDB, which he launched in 2009. He still
chairs its advisory board.
The Wall Street Journal reported this month that Malaysian
government investigators had discovered that nearly $700 million had moved
through government agencies, banks and companies linked to 1MDB before ending
up in Najib’s personal accounts.
The premier has denied the report as “political sabotage”, while 1MDB
has said it did not transfer any funds to the premier.
1MDB is reeling under $11 billion in debt, blamed largely on a
much-questioned drive to acquire power-industry assets.
Fears that it may collapse or need a massive bailout have contributed to
a recent slide in the ringgit currency to 17-year lows.
A government statement cited by Bernama said Gani’s appointment had been
“terminated effective July 27 due to health reasons”.
But the announcements touched off speculation that Najib was moving to
contain the damage from the scandal.
Last week the home ministry suspended for three months the publishing
permits of The Edge Media Group, which is known for its aggressive reporting on
1MDB.
The overseas Sarawak Report, an activist website that had also published
a series of exposes, has also been blocked. Asia Times
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