KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 29 — A royal commission of inquiry (RCI) should look
into Tun Daim Zainuddin’s role in allegedly losing billions of ringgit
during the Mahathir administration, Lim Kit Siang said today.
The DAP parliamentary leader agreed with Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad that
“all Tuns” should be audited, especially his successor Tun Abdullah
Badawi, and said former finance minister Daim must not be left out.
“The other Tun I can think of is Tun Daim Zainuddin, who was
Mahathir’s finance minister twice and played a key role in many of the
financial scandals in the Mahathir era,” Lim said in a statement today.
Dr Mahathir, prime minister from 1981 to 2003, said today he would
accept an audit on his administration after Lim claimed taxpayers lost
RM100 billion in financial scandals during the former’s 22-year tenure.
“But all Tuns must be audited. The sons and grandsons of Tuns as
well,” he said in an apparent reference to his successor, Abdullah.
Dr Mahathir has repeatedly criticised Abdullah since 2005, accusing
the latter of nepotism by allowing son-in-law Khairy Jamaluddin to wield
power in the prime minister’s office and encouraging corruption.
Lim also said today the RCI would help determine if the Malaysia
Airlines System Bhd (MAS) “double bailout” was triggered by the RM30
billion 1992/93 Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) forex scandal, among others.
He added that it was up to Dr Mahathir to clarify if the proposed
full audit and accounting into losses caused by alleged financial
scandals should also be extended to cover Abdullah’s five-year
premiership.
Lim last week called on Putrajaya to perform a full review on the
billions in losses it incurred from financial scandals during Dr
Mahathir’s tenure.
The Ipoh Timur MP said such scrutiny was needed as Prime Minister
Datuk Seri Najib Razak appeared not to have learned lessons from the
scandals, which he asserted had cost the nation some RM100 billion.
He cited Putrajaya’s move to settle out-of-court with Tan Sri Tajudin
Ramli as an example of how the federal bailouts of companies have not
abated under Najib.
Tajudin was recently freed from a RM580 million debt resulting from
the loan he had taken to purchase MAS in 1994, after agreeing to an
out-of-court settlement initiated by the government.
But in his court affidavits earlier, the former MAS chairman claimed
it was Dr Mahathir, then prime minister, who had made him purchase the
controlling stake in MAS at the time.
According to Tajudin, this was to help bail out BNM after the central
bank suffered massive foreign exchange losses, due partly to
speculation in foreign currency markets.
Describing this as “national service”, Tajudin also claimed the
airline purchase had come with an “overriding agreement” that
indemnified him against any losses suffered.
But Dr Mahathir in his autobiography published last March denied that
he had forced Tajudin to purchase MAS in 1994 for RM1.8 billion,
claiming instead the latter was “elated” over his purchase.
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