Germany's finance ministry has ordered an investigation into business
relations between the family of Sarawak Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud
and Deutsche Bank, for any element of money-laundering.
Swiss-based
NGO Bruno Manser Fund (BMF), which has been calling for the
investigation, said the ministry's order is in response to its complaint.
BMF
claimed that the Germany finance ministry had stated in a email reply
that it has 'requested the German Federal Financial Supervisory
Authority to clarify and check the situation that you outline in your
letter to the Federal Chancellor from the money-laundering angle,
insofar as this concerns a specific financial institution and, if the
Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) considers it appropriate, to
instigate supervisory measures'.
The ministry added that the BaFin 'has already made a start on clarifying the situation'.
BaFin is the supervisory authority for financial institutions in respect of money laundering legislation.
BMF welcomed the investigation and is calling on the German federal government to freeze any assets held by Taib (right) in that country.
"In
addition, BMF is demanding complete transparency from Deutsche Bank
with regard to its dealings with the Taib family and the termination of
its business relations with the Malaysian potentate, who has gained a
bad reputation worldwide," it said in a statement issued today.
In
a letter to German Chancellor Angela Merkel in June, three NGOs - BMF,
the Hamburg Rettet den Regenwald (Rainforest-Rescue) Association and the
Society for Threatened Peoples - drew the attention of the German
government to the Deutsche Bank's close business relations with Taib and
demanded that his assets in Germany be blocked.
Links revealed
According
to BMF, Deutsche Bank has processed transactions worth several hundred
million euros for the Sarawak government since 2004, and is engaged in a
joint venture in Malaysia with Cahya Mata Sarawak(CMS), which is
controlled by the Taib family.
CMS
and Deutsche Bank are the principal shareholders of the finance company K
& N Kenanga Holdings, based in Kuala Lumpur, with its subsidiary
Kenanga Deutsche Futures being an accredited broker on the Malaysian
stock exchange.
In 2005, Deutsche
Bank was the sole book-runner for the US$600 million (RM1.82 billion)
listing of Sarawak International Incorporated in Labuan, Malaysia's
offshore financial centre, said BMF.
Before
December 2004, Deutsche Bank had arranged a US$135 million (RM409
million) loan for the Sarawak Economic Development Corporation, a state
agency controlled by Taib.
Deutsche
Bank International's Jersey and Cayman branches are administering the
Jersey-based Sogo Holdings Ltd, through which several Taib family assets
in the US are held, BMF further claimed.
In
May, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority Finma had
announced an investigation into Taib assets in Switzerland, at the
instigation of Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey.
At
the beginning of June, the Malaysia Anti-Corruption Commission had
announced that it is investigating Taib for alleged corruption.
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