Showing posts with label PKFZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PKFZ. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 July 2010

:: Petanda PRU13 semakin hampir ?

Home » Amin Iskandar, News

PRU 13 semakin hampir?

29 July 2010

Oleh Amin Iskandar

Bekas menteri pengangkutan dan presiden MCA, Tun Ling Liong Sik hari ini didakwa berkenaan dengan skandal projek PKFZ.

“Ling didakwa menipu kerajaan dengan memperdayakan jemaah menteri untuk memberikan persetujuan pembelian tanah di Pulau Indah untuk projek Mega Distribution Hub di Pelabuhan Kelang.
Dia juga didakwa dengan curang menyembunyikan fakta bahawa penilaian Jabatan Penilaian dan Perkhidmatan Harta, Kementerian Kewangan ke atas tanah seluas 43,538,200 kaki persegi yang dicadangkannya.”

Sehubungan itu, beliau dituduh mengikut Seksyen 418 Kanun Keseksaan yang membawa hukuman penjara sehingga tujuh tahun dengan denda atau kedua-duanya sekali jika sabit kesalahan.

Bekas menteri pengangkutan itu juga berikan pertuduhan alternatif mengikut Seksyen 417, Kanun Keseksaan.

Beliau bagaimanapun mengaku tidak bersalah dan ikat jamin ditetapkan pada RM1 juta”. Petikan laporan Malaysiakini.

Dahulu bekas Menteri Tanah, Kasitah Gaddam dan Eric Chia pernah didakwa diatas pertuduhan rasuah. Selepas pendakwaan itu, pilihanraya umum 2004 berlangsung.

Parti pemerintah menang besar pada ketika itu kerana imej bersih Abdullah Badawi dan kerajaan beliau dlihat memerangi rasuah tanpa mengira siapa pelakunya.

Lama kelamaan, kedua-dua Kasitah Gaddam dan Eric Chia dibebaskan kerana dikatakan tidak ada bukti yang kukuh.

Apakah hari ini skrip lama dimainkan semula? Ling Liong Sik didakwa diatas skandal rasuah dan penyelewengan besar PKFZ.

Tidak lama sebelum ini, Ong Tee Keat, bekas menteri pengangkutan yang memulakan pembongkaran skandal PKFZ dijatuhkan dari MCA di atas sokongan pimpinan tertinggi negara.

Percayakah kita Ling Liong Sik akan benar-benar dijatuhkan hukuman? Tunggu dan lihat. Yang paling nyata adalah PRU 13 akan datang tidak lama lagi.

Kepada yang ingin bertanding, bersiap-siaplah. Kepada yang seronok jadi ahli parlimen, Adun atau memegang jawatan tertinggi dalam negeri, berjaga-jagalah.

Keseronokkan itu tidak akan terlalu lama kerana tidak lama lagi harus bertanding semula.



Thursday, 29 July 2010

:: PKFZ: Tun Dr Ling Liong Sik didakwa menipu kerajaan Malaysia?

PKFZ: Ling hadapi tuduhan tipu kerajaan M'sia
Hazlan Zakaria & Lee Way Loon
Jul 29, 10
12:04pm
Kongsi 171
Bekas menteri pengangkutan, Tun Dr Ling Liong Sik hari ini didakwa di Mahkamah Sesyen Putrajaya atas tuduhan menipu kerajaan Malaysia dengan memperdaya Jemaah Menteri berhubung pembelian tanah untuk projek ”Mega Distribution Hub” di Pelabuhan Klang.

Ling, 67, juga adalah bekas presiden MCA.

Beliau tiba di mahkamah pada jam 4.45 petang dengan ditemani isterinya, Toh Puan Ena Ling serta dua anak lelakinya.

Ling kemudian mengambil tempatnya di kandang tertuduh.

Beliau adalah presiden MCA yang kedua dihadapkan ke mahkamah selepas Tan Koon Swan.

Ling didakwa menipu kerajaan sekitar 25 September 2002 dan 6 November 2002 dengan memperdayakan jemaah menteri untuk memberikan persetujuan pembelian tanah di Pulau Indah untuk projek Mega Distribution Hub di Pelabuhan Kelang.

Dia juga didakwa dengan curang menyembunyikan fakta berhubung penilaian Jabatan Penilaian dan Perkhidmatan Harta, Kementerian Kewangan ke atas tanah seluas 43,538,200 kaki persegi yang dicadangkannya.


Ling yang memegang jawatan Menteri Pengangkutan selama 14 tahun dari Januari 1986 hingga Mei 2000, didakwa atas satu pertuduhan utama mengikut Seksyen 418 Kanun Keseksaan dan satu pertuduhan pilihan mengikut Seksyen 417 kanun yang sama.

Seksyen 418 Kanun Keseksaan yang membawa hukuman penjara sehingga tujuh tahun atau denda atau kedua-duanya sekali jika sabit kesalahan.

Manakala pertuduhan alternatif mengikut Seksyen 417, Kanun Keseksaan, yang membawa hukuman lebih ringan iaitu penjara sehingga lima tahun atau denda atau kedua-duanya sekali.

Beliau bagaimanapun mengaku tidak bersalah dan membayar ikat jamin RM1 juta dengan seorang penjamin.

Hakim Suzana Hussin kemudiannya menetapkan 3 September ini sebagai tarikh sebutan kes.

Ling kemudiannya dibebaskan dengan jaminan polis dan akan membayar wang ikat jaminnya di Mahkamah Sesyen, esok.

Peguam Negara, Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail mengetuai pendakwaan dan dibantu oleh Ketua Bahagian Pendakwaan Datuk Tun Majid Tun Hamzah, Dzulkifli Ahmad dan Manoj Kurup, manakala Ling diwakili peguam Datuk RR Sethu.


Sebelum ini, desas desus seorang personaliti terkenal dijangka didakwa di Mahkamah Sesyen itu menyaksikan puluhan wartawan, termasuk agensi berita luar negara bekejar ke mahkamah sejak awal pagi ini.

Kebanyakan mereka berhimpun di lobi dan pintu masuk mahkamah manakala ada pula yang menunggu di kawasan sekitarnya.

Pada jam 4 petang, Abdul Gani dan tiga timbalan pendakwa raya, termasuk ketua pendakwa Datuk Tun Abdul Majid Hamzah, tiba di mahkamah tanpa bercakap kepada wartawan.

Dua yang lain itu adalah Manoj Kurup and Dzulkifli Ahmad.

Sebelum kehadiran mereka di mahkamah, sebuah kereta Proton Perdana hitam dilihat memasuki perkarangan mahkamah dengan seorang lelaki yang tidak dikenali.

Sunday, 29 November 2009

:: Benarkah cerita ini ?

Nov 29th, 2009 | By Admin | Category: Rencana, black

Oleh Black

Dibawah adalah berita yang diambil dari Malaysiakini. Saya adaah diantara jutaan rakyat Malaysia yang sedang menanti jawapan Tun Dr. Mahathir mengenai isu ini. Kemungkinan besar Tun masih lagi sibuk, maklumlah Raya Haji. Pasti banyak program Korban yang Tun kena pergi.

Siapakah yang akan disalahkan kali ini?

Singapura?

Media Barat? Kita tunggu sahajalah Tun memberikan jawapan. Nak tahu juga kemana pergi 100 Billion milik rakyat Malaysia.

Sila baca berita dibawah:

How the gov’t ‘looted’ up to US$100 bil

The multi-billion ringgit Port Klang Free Zone scandal may be big, but it is only the latest in a long line of scandals going back to the early 1980s.

Time magazine quoted Daniel Lian, a Southeast Asia economist at Morgan Stanley in Singapore, saying that the country might have lost “as much as US$100 billion since the early 1980s to corruption”.

The scandals listed below are only a small sample of the looting of the country’s coffers:

In July of 1983, what was then the biggest banking scandal in world history erupted in Hong Kong, when it was discovered that Bumiputra Malaysia Finance (BMF), a unit of Bank Bumiputra Malaysia Bhd, had lost as much as US$1 billion which had been siphoned off by prominent public figures into private bank accounts.

The story involved murder, suicide and the involvement of officials at the very top of the Malaysian government. Ultimately it involved a bailout by the Malaysian government amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars.

Mak Foon Tan, the murderer of Jalil Ibraim, a Bank Bumi assistant manager who was sent to Hong Kong to investigate the disappearance of the money, was given the death sentence, and Malaysian businessman George Tan who had participated in looting most of the funds, was jailed after his Carrian Group collapsed in what was then Hong Kong’s biggest bankruptcy, and a handful of others were charged.

mahathir and rais yatim pc 190309 04No major politician was ever punished in Malaysia despite a white paper prepared by an independent commission that cited cabinet minutes of Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad giving an okay to a request to throw more money into the scandal in an effort to contain it.

That was just the first Bank Bumi scandal. The government-owned bank had to be rescued twice more with additional losses of nearly US$600 million in today’s dollars.

Ultimately government officials gave up and the bank was absorbed into CIMB Group, currently headed by Nazir Razak, the sitting prime minister’s brother.

Bank Negara lost RM20 bil

That scandal, which stretched over several years before its denouement in 1985, set the tone for 24 years of similar scandals related to top Malaysian officials and was the first to prove that in Malaysia, you can not only get away with murder, you can get away with looting the treasury as well.

eric chia court case acquittal 260607 happyPerwaja Steel, for instance, lost US$800 million and its boss, Eric Chia, a crony of Mahathir’s, was charged with looting the company. He stood trial, but was acquitted without having to put on a defense.

In the mid-1980s, the Co-operative Central Bank, a bank set up to aid the Indian smallholder community, had to be rescued by Bank Negara, the country’s central bank, after hundreds of millions of ringgit in loans granted to a flock of Umno and MIC politicians became non-performing.

Some had never been serviced at all. Although the chief executive and general manager were charged with criminal breach of trust, none of the politicians were ever charged.

petronas mega projects and bail outs history 260208Before that, the Malaysian government was believed to have lost US$500 million in an attempt at Mahathir’s urging to corner the London tin market through a company called Maminco, driving the world price of tin from US$4.50 per tonne to US$7.50.

It then sought to cover up the loss by establishing a US$2 company called Mukawasa from which allocations of new share issues to the government’s Employees Provident Fund (EPF) were diverted. Mukawasa expected to sell the shares at a windfall profit to hide the tin speculation.

Mahathir also was behind an attempt by the then governor of Bank Negara, the central bank, to aggressively speculate in the global foreign exchange market. Bank Negara ended up losing an estimated RM20 billion. The governor, Jaffar Hussein, and the head of forex trading, Nor Mohamed Yakcop were forced to resign.

‘Malaysia’s Enron scandal

There have been many other political and financial scandals since. In 2005, Bank Islam Malaysia, the country’s flagship Islamic bank, reported losses of RM457 million mainly due to provisioning totaling RM774 million as a result of bad loans and investments incurred by its Labuan branch.

Cumulatively, Bank Islam ran up non-performing loans of RM2.2 billion, partly from mismanagement and poor internal controls but also “years of regulatory indifference fueled by the misconceived notion of an untouchable Bank Islam because it was a favourite child of the Malaysian government, being the first and model Islamic bank in the country and region,” according to a December 19, 2005 article in Arab News.

“Bank Islam had a reputation in the market for being the spoilt child of the Malaysian Ministry of Finance; and the perception of the bank was more of a Muslim financial fraternity or government development financial institution,” the report said.

transmile air aircraft 250507In 2007, in what was called Malaysia’s Enron scandal, the publicly traded Transmile Group Bhd, whose chairman was former MCA president and cabinet minister Ling Liong Sik, was caught having overstated its revenue by RM530 million.

A pretax profit from RM207 million in 2006 was actually a loss of RM126 million, and a pretax profit of RM120 million in 2005 was a loss of RM77 million, causing the government postal company Pos Malaysia & Services Holdings Bhd to warn that its earnings for the 2006 financial year might be affected by the reported overstatement, as the postal group owned 15.3 percent of Transmile.

Bailouts and more bailouts

Over the years 2001 to 2006, the government had to spend billions to rescue seven privatised projects including Kuala Lumpur’s two public transport systems, the perennially ailing Malaysia Airlines, the national sewage system and a variety of others that, in the words of one study, “had been privatised prematurely.”

parliament pics 200508 rafidah azizThe government also repeatedly bailed out highway construction concessionaires, all of them closely connected to Umno, to the tune of another RM38.5 billion.

In 2008, it was revealed that Rafidah Aziz, who had served as trade and industry minister for 18 years, had been peddling approved permits for duty-free car sales and allegedly lining her pockets.

Two companies which didn’t even have showrooms – one of which belonged to the husband of Rafidah’s niece – received scores of permits.

the bailouts companies and projects 131206Although Rafidah came in for heavy criticism from within Umno, she remained in office until she was defeated in party elections.

In the 1960s, federal prosecutors in the United States who were attempting to jail the late labour boss Jimmy Hoffa for looting the Teamsters Pension Fund of millions of dollars with his cronies were puzzled by the fact that their revelations appeared to have little effect on the union’s rank and file.

It was because no matter how much money Hoffa and his cronies stole, there was always money left because the fund was so rich. That appears to be the case with Malaysia.