PETALING
JAYA - The Wall Street Journal is standing by its report that millions of US dollars were channelled into the personal
bank accounts of Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, saying
that their investigation was based on solid documentation.
The
journal's Hong Kong Bureau chief Ken Brown said they took the investigations
very seriously as it involved accusations against a country's top leader.
"We
were very careful and we believe the investigation and documents we have are
solid and come from a reliable investigation and not a political investigation.
"The
documents we saw have been shared with the Malaysian Attorney-General and
others in government. It's been seen by the Prime Minister," Brown told
CNBC in an interview Saturday.
Najib had
refuted WSJ's findings on Friday, saying that it was a political ploy engineered by his opponents to
topple a democratically elected Prime Minister. Brown
said the response offered by the Prime Minister and his office had been similar
when they ran a previous report on 1Malaysia Development Berhad.
"They
(Prime Minister's Office) were saying that the Prime Minister didn't take any
funds for personal use...they said political opponents of his were coming up
with this story to hit him. "It's
the same stuff they said from our earlier story about 1MDB. Reaction has been
the same," he told CNBC.
Asked if
WSJ knew where the source of the money was from and what it was used for, Brown
said they "know what they know", adding that the money trail ended in
the bank accounts with the Prime Minister's name on it.
"We
know what we know. One batch of money came from a unit in the Finance Ministry
and another batch came through a private bank affiliated to Abu Dhabi.
"Where
the money went, we don't know. The trail we have ends at bank accounts with the
PM's name on it," he added.
In its
report Friday, WSJ noted from its investigations and documents it sighted that
US$700million (S$943 million) was transferred into Najib's personal bank
accounts prior to the 13th general election in 2013.
1MDB and
the Prime Minister's Office have vehemently denied the allegations, with Najib
pinning the blame on former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad of
conspiring with his foreign allies to tarnish his image.
Source: AsiaOne
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