1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) should disclose and
publish a full account of its billion ringgit funds parked in the Cayman
Islands, PKR said today.
Kelana Jaya MP Wong Chen
says 1MDB has made substantial foreign exchange gains after moving its funds to
the Cayman Islands. – The Malaysian Insider file pic, December 23, 2014.Kelana
Jaya MP Wong Chen says 1MDB has made substantial foreign exchange gains after
moving its funds to the Cayman Islands.
Its Kelana Jaya MP, Wong
Chen, in a statement today said the strategic development company should have
no trouble in bringing back the parked funds as it had made substantial foreign
exchange gains at a time when ringgit was stronger.
He said Prime Minister Datuk
Seri Najib Razak should direct 1MDB to repatriate the funds to Malaysia by
year-end. (Najib is chairman of the advisory council of 1MDB.)
Wong was commenting on a
statement by the company's board of director chairman Tan Sri Lodin Wok
Kamaruddin last night that bringing the funds back would have exposed them to
fluctuations on the foreign exchange market.
The ringgit had declined by
6.5% in the past nine months to RM3.48 against the US dollar.
Wong said the funds, which
were likely in US dollars, were moved to the Cayman Islands, known as one of
the world's largest registered fund jurisdiction, in September 2012 when the
exchange rate between the greenback and the ringgit were at US$1 to RM3.07.
Since then, the funds had
made substantial exchange rate gains of 13% or 41 sen.
"Having made
substantial foreign exchange gains, why can’t 1MDB repatriate its funds to
Malaysia?"
As such, the first-term MP
described Lodin's statement as "financially illogical" and worse,
went against the pledge made by Deputy Finance Minister Datuk Ahmad Maslan in
Parliament on November 6 that the company's funds in the Caymans would be
returned by year-end.
"This illogical stand
that is contrary to the minister’s promise to Parliament raises a serious
question: does the so-called money in the Cayman Islands still exist or has it
completely disappeared in the nearby Bermuda Triangle?"
1MDB has been criticised by
former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, who noted that a large part of
the money raised from the issue of debt paper by 1MDB has been sent to the
Cayman Islands, a move which many, including the opposition, had also
questioned.
Critics have complained
about the lack of transparency in how the money was managed out of the Caymans
and it has been estimated that at least RM18 billion was parked there.
However, Lodin had said last
night that there was nothing unusual about companies of 1MDB's size investing
their funds in the Caymans, with the Cayman Monetary Authority recognised as
one of the leading fund regulators in the world.
He added that thousands of
international blue-chip companies have funds regulated by the Cayman Monetary
Authority, including more than 200 Malaysian companies.(The Malaysian Insider)
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