ANTIDOTE The graft scandal that has
engulfed former Sime Darby CEO Ahmad Zubir Murshid has laid bare the
anatomy of corrupt land deals in Sarawak.
These scams have
enriched the state's political elite and their acolytes, while
condemning rural Sarawakians to generations of poverty.
On July 17, Zubir was charged in the Kuala Lumpur High Court with criminal breach of trust: the MACC alleged he had cheated Sime Darby of RM100 million before he left the group in 2010. He pleaded not guilty, then declined comment when pursued by reporters.
Even
to those unfamiliar with corruption in Sarawak's land deals, it is
obvious that it takes two hands to clap - and at least two parties to
commit graft. Sime Darby's local partners in these farcical oil palm
plantation deals have, therefore, come under scrutiny.
Zubir (on the right in picture above)
was alleged to have overseen the purchase of land in Kapit, Julau and
Sarikei around three years ago, after the Sarawak government had
approved a joint venture (JV) Sime Darby oil palm plantation on native
customary rights (NCR) land.
This JV, arranged under Chief
Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud's "New Concept" land policy, was formed by
Sime Darby and Pelita, a company founded by the Sarawak government's
statutory body, the Land Custody and Development Authority, or LCDA.
An astonishing 'New Concept'
Under
Taib's "New Concept", a private investor (in this case, the hapless
Sime Darby) holds a 60 percent stake in each JV. Pelita owns 10 percent
on behalf of the LCDA, while also holding the remaining 30 percent in
trust for the NCR landowners.
This
model means that major investors can have access to the NCR land assets
of the Dayak and other natives, usually for 60 years, without having to
compensate all the impoverished landowners involved.
These deals
represent a new concept, indeed: hundreds of native communities
statewide have sued Taib's government, because the natives have been
stripped of their traditional NCR communal land rights, often in return
for empty promises.
Disgruntled native communities argue that
this "New Concept" has effectively been cast as "robbing the needy to
feed the greedy". Opponents of the "New Concept" refer to the LCDA "Let's Chase Dayaks Away".
In
a growing number of lawsuits, judges have berated the state government
and its partner investors for failing to obtain prior and informed
consent from all landowners involved, before launching JVs.
These
"New Concept" controversies often revolve around village heads, paid
off to sign JV agreements on behalf of entire communities, without
consulting other villagers.
NCR landowners have protested that
their native rights are guaranteed by the federal constitution,
Sarawak's land code and an expanding body of legal precedents in the
highest courts in the country.
Young Datuk's windfall
In
this case, Sime Darby was not awarded the land in 2008 and 2009,
despite the state government's approval of the JV. Instead, in an adroit
sleight of hand, the state government awarded the land to two companies
with no track record in plantations: Nature Ambience and Vertical
Drive.
Sime Darby then had to pay RM16.8 million to buy Nature
Ambience and RM85 million for Vertical Drive - a total of nearly RM102
million.
Both Nature Ambience and Vertical Drive were effectively owned by a local businessman, Chew Chiaw Ann (left), 42. He held more than 99.9 percent of the shares in both vehicles, through several layers of proxy companies.
Chew
was awarded his datukship in 2009, at the age of 40. He is now the CEO
of a construction company called Metro Sedia Sdn Bhd.
In the
past two years, Chew's company has been the fortunate recipient of
multimillion-ringgit contracts from the Sarawak government.
One was a RM6 million contract to supply solar power to rural Long Peluan, home to fewer than 400 people - a staggering cost of more than RM15,000 per resident.
Chew
is a young Chinese businessman, operating in an economy professing
overwhelming preference for bumiputeras, so his stellar overnight
success has certainly bemused observers.
"He must be extremely
capable," See said, "yet I'd never heard of him until now. Chew Chiaw
Ann was a nobody until the (Sime Darby) transaction was completed."
In
June 2011, Ting Sze Fui, the DAP assemblyperson r Meradong, Sarikei,
revealed the existence of a letter dated Nov 20, 2008, signed by the
permanent secretary of the Ministry for Land Development, granting
approval to Vertical Drive to develop 48,199 hectares of NCR land.
Vertical
Drive's parent company had been registered only a month earlier, in
October 2008. Sime Darby then bought the company, dropping a princely
fortune in Chew Chiaw Ann's lap.
Similarly, Nature Ambience had
been set up in October 2008. Only a year later, in October 2009, the
Ministry for Land Development awarded Nature Ambience 26,211 hectares of
land to develop, and Sime Darby paid a king's ransom for the company in
December 2009.
Scandal opens up a can of worms
See
pointed out that the chief minister and the minister in charge of
issuing provisional leases for NCR land, have seen through increasingly
intense strife within the state BN's higher echelons.
These
self-enriching land deals, he argued, created artificial and specious
competition with genuine private companies looking to invest in Sarawak.
"Sime
Darby is not the only investor to have been ripped off by the web of
(state) BN politicians' and cronies' companies. It is believed that
other big companies such as Tabung Haji Plantations are also falling
prey to such corrupt practices," See said.
The swindles have
seriously damaged the confidence of potential investors in land
development projects, as well as in other sectors of Sarawak, he
concluded.
"This scandal exposes the incredible NCR land deals in Sarawak," See said. "It opens up a can of worms."
The
Sime Darby debacle seems to be the "New Concept" modus operandi in
Sarawak: provisional leases are granted for plantation JVs, in an opaque
fashion, to well-connected local companies.
Then, selling the
companies to big plantation investors at a handsome premium, the owners
of these companies then make clean, instant profits, virtually without
lifting a finger.
"What on earth was the permanent secretary of
the Ministry for Land Development doing, awarding huge swathes of land
to two companies set up shortly beforehand - with zero track record in
plantations?" See asked.
"Can an unknown Chinese businessman
suddenly become so close to the person at the top, that he is rewarded
so handsomely? No, I am sure certain politicians are the true
beneficiaries."
If indeed Chew is acting as a proxy for a top
political decision-maker, it will train the spotlight squarely on the
MACC, the federal anti-graft agency.
The MACC has been faced
international condemnation for failing to report any progress on its
probe on allegations of corruption against Taib.
With the general
election looming, Taib's support for Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak
will be crucial if Najib's party, Umno, is to retain power at the
national level. But the relationship between the two leaders has been
prickly.
This MACC prosecution of Zubir sends a message from
Najib to Sarawak's political leadership that the Sime Darby scandal may
yet claim more victims. It may also be a gentle reminder that Taib's MPs
must deliver - and toe the Umno line - in the coming election.
KERUAH
USIT is a human rights activist - ‘anak Sarawak, bangsa Malaysia'. This
weekly column is an effort to provide a voice for marginalised
Malaysians. Keruah Usit can be contacted at keruah_usit@yahoo.com
And yet Sarawakians still vote for BN...
ReplyDeleteWhat is MACC doing...?
ReplyDeleteThis guy is Shafie Apdal proxy, tangkap dia!
ReplyDeleteChew Chiaw Ann Shafie Apdal proxy, mother fucker
ReplyDelete