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| Posted: 29 Jun 2010 04:17 AM PDT Or at least for the current wearer of the king's hat, who gets to stay there for five years Well-placed sources in Kuala Lumpur told Asia Sentinel that the RM811 million figure is only preliminary. The total cost is actually nearing RM1.2 billion and is expected to go higher, the sources said, with both the Sultan of Perlis, who retired as Agong in 2006, and the Sultan of Terengganu, who took his place, becoming hidden partners with Malaysia's seventh richest individual, Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhairy. THE CORRIDORS OF POWER Asia Sentinel
On June 23, speaking to the Regional Cambridge International Symposium on Economic Crime in Kuala Lumpur, the Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism Minister, Ismail Sabri Yaakob, outlined broad efforts to improve transparency and confront corruption, saying all reported cases will be fully investigated regardless of the position or status of those involved and that punishment will be swift and harsh. But before the policy can be fully implemented, there is the matter of the cost of building a new national palace for the country's sultans, which has doubled from RM400 million (US$124.2 million) to RM811 million since the contract was let – without bid -- in 2006 under the premiership of Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, and may well triple, according to government insiders. The palace is far behind schedule and is scheduled to be completed by 2011. The contract for the upgrading of a flyover to the new palace will cost an additional RM150 million. Malaysia has been abuzz for days since the cost overruns were announced over the identity of Kejuruteraan Kenari and Maya Maju. Both are listed in Malaysia's corporate registry with a flock of officers that nobody seems to know. The Malaysian blogosphere has been preoccupied with speculation on their connections. Maya Maju lists two shareholders and five directors. The directors are Man Bin Mat, Md Nizam B. Md Sharif, Rasidah Bt. Salleh, and secretaries Lim Hooi Mooi and Tan Enk Purn. The shareholders are Maryna Keh Abdullah @ Miss Keh Kim Lan and Man Bin Mat. Then there is the question of why, with Malaysian politicians making public pronouncements that the country will go bankrupt unless subsidies for the poor are withdrawn, a new Istana is needed at all. The current one, built in 1928 as the onetime home of a Chinese tycoon, stands on 11 hectares of grounds in the middle of Kuala Lumpur. It has undergone a long series of renovations going back to World War II when it was used as a Japanese Army mess hall. It was refurbished in 1986 at a cost of RM70 million. It is difficult to say just what the RM811 million actually includes. Some critics say the costs for equipping the new building do not include furniture, lighting, air conditioning and a wide variety of other charges that can be expected to drive the total price tag far higher. "For Umno," wrote one critic to The Malaysian Insider online news portal, "all projects MUST undergo an increase of minimum 40 percent of total budget in order for it to be completed in triple the estimated time. If not, then that person isn't a loyal Umno member." |
| PENYAMUN DISELAMATKAN LAGI GUNA WANG RAKYAT.... Posted: 29 Jun 2010 04:08 AM PDT UPDATED @ 06:48:57 PM 29-06-2010 June 29, 2010 KUALA LUMPUR, June 29 — The Najib administration said today In replying DAP's Lim Kit Siang's question in Parliament, Deputy Transport Minister Datuk Abdul Rahim Bakri said the government had a "commitment" to the bondholders and that payment needed to be made. "We have a commitment to the bondholders. We have to make payment and honour that commitment," said the deputy minister. Lim had asked whether the government, through the Port Klang Authority (PKA) should not pay KDSB since PKA was in a legal dispute with KDSB, and instead set up a (escrow) third-party account to hold the money. After Abdul Rahim's reply, Petaling Jaya Utara MP Tony Pua (picture) pointed out to Abdul Rahim that PKA's commitment was not to KDSB's bondholders, but KDSB itself which is the main contractor to the Port Klang Free Trade Zone (PKFZ). But the deputy minister did not respond to Pua's argument. Abdul Rahim later on maintained his remarks made in Parliament. "Of course we are paying the bondholders because they have already given their money to KDSB to build the project," said Abdul Rahim to The Malaysian Insider. But the deputy minister said that the government will not be footing the bill for KDSB's oustanding taxes to the Inland Revenue Board (IRB) amounting to RM328.4 million. "They(IRB) asked but the money is not meant for KDSB anymore, the money is meant for the bondholders as they have financed the project. They can claim direct from KDSB, they cannot claim from the government. If you don't pay the bond, then it's risking of our rating," said Abdul Rahim. Earlier on during a press conference, DAP's Pua said that the government should withhold whatever payments due to Kuala Dimensi Sdn Bhd (KDSB) until its RM1.4 billion legal suit with PKA (Port Klang Authority) is settled. "The government should withhold whatever payments due to KDSB until the legal suit is resolved," said Pua. PKA filed a RM1.4 billion legal suit back in 2009 against KDSB for fraudulent and excess claims. The case is still pending. Pua's prediction was that the government would in the end bail out KDSB from its financial woes, and used 2009's example where PKA was instructed by the Ministry of Finance to make an instalment payment of RM660 million. "PKA has accordingly informed the various KDSB bondholders of its intent to withhold 2 payments-RM230 million due o June 30 2010 and RM120 million due in July 2010- for the purposes of settling the outstanding income taxes of KDSB. "The KDSB bondholders are understandably upset with the development as there is a likelihood that they may not be paid for the loans extended to KDSB. However based on the previous action taken by the Ministry of Finance, they will once again insist that PKA make full payments amounting to RM722 million to the bondholders to fulfil the "guarantee" which has been provided by the government by virtue of the letters of guarantee signed by Tan Sri Chan Kong Choy," said Pua. He claimed that in the end, the bondholders would be able to recover their "investment" with interest while KDSB would not need to fork out a single sen of tax. |
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KUALA LUMPUR, June 29 — The Najib administration said
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