Malaysian ex-PM Najib goes to jail for graft after losing final appeal
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[August 23, 2022]
By Rozanna Latiff
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) -Malaysia's top
court ordered former prime minister Najib Razak to begin a 12-year
prison sentence on Tuesday after upholding a guilty conviction on
charges related to a multi-billion dollar graft scandal at state fund
1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB).
The Federal Court ruling caps the stunning downfall of Najib, who until
four years ago governed Malaysia with an iron grip and suppressed local
investigations of the 1MDB scandal that has implicated financial
institutions and high-ranking officials worldwide.
Najib, wearing a dark suit and tie, sat in the dock as the verdict was
read out. His wife, Rosmah Mansor, and three children were seated behind
him.
Security officials then gathered around the bespectacled former premier
and he was later seen leaving court in a black car with police escort.
A court official and sources close to Najib said he was taken to Kajang
Prison, about 40 km away from Kuala Lumpur.
"This is unprecedented. Najib will be remembered for his many firsts,
the first prime minister to lose a general election, the first to be
convicted," said Adib Zalkapli, Director at political risk consultancy
BowerGroupAsia.
The British-educated son of Malay nobility held the premiership from
2009 to 2018, when public anger over the graft scandal brought election
defeat, and dozens of corruption charges were lodged in following
months.
Najib, 69, was found guilty by a lower court in July 2020 of criminal
breach of trust, abuse of power and money laundering for illegally
receiving about $10 million from SRC International, a former unit of
1MDB. He had been out on bail pending appeals.
The former premier, who had pleaded not guilty, was sentenced to 12
years' jail and a 210 million ringgit ($46.84 million) fine.
Knocking back Najib's final appeal, the court also denied his request
for a stay of sentence.
"The defence is so inherently inconsistent and incredible that it has
not raised reasonable doubt on the case... We also find that the
sentence imposed is not manifestly excessive," Chief Justice Tengku
Maimun Tuan Mat said.
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Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib
Razak speaks to journalists outside the Federal Court during a court
break, in Putrajaya, Malaysia August 23, 2022. REUTERS/Lai Seng Sin
The panel of judges had unanimously dismissed Najib's appeals, she
said.
The court had earlier rejected a last gasp effort by Najib to
forestall the final verdict by requesting the removal of the chief
justice from the panel.
Addressing the court moments before the final verdict was delivered,
Najib said he was the victim of injustice, while asking for another
two months for his new lawyers to prepare his appeal.
"It's the worst feeling to have to realise that the might of the
judiciary is pinned against me in the most unfair manner," Najib
told the court.
Prosecutors have said some $4.5 billion was stolen from 1MDB -
co-founded by Najib during his first year as prime minister in 2009.
Investigators say they had traced more than $1 billion of 1MDB money
to accounts linked to Najib.
Various recipients of the siphoned funds, including a fugitive
financier named Jho Low, used the money to buy luxury assets and
real estate, a Picasso painting, a private jet, a superyacht,
hotels, jewellery, and to finance the 2013 Hollywood film "The Wolf
of Wall Street", U.S. lawsuits have said.
The wide-ranging scandal prompted the U.S. Department of Justice to
open what became its biggest kleptocracy investigation.
Najib, who faces several more trials over the allegations, has
consistently denied wrongdoing.
He could apply for a review of the Federal Court decision, though
such applications are rarely successful. He can also seek a pardon
from the king. If successful, he could be released without serving
the full 12-year term.
But the conviction means Najib will lose his parliamentary seat and
cannot contest elections.
(Reporting by Rozanna Latiff; additional reporting by Zahra Matarani;
Writing by A. Ananthalakshmi; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and
Nick Macfie)
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