AP Interview: Malaysia to sell bling seized in ex-PM’s probe
PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia — Malaysia’s government will sell much of the huge stash of jewelry and luxury goods, including diamond necklaces, tiaras and designer handbags that were seized in a money-laundering probe of former leader Najib Razak, Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng told The Associated Press on Friday.
Police said 12,000 pieces of jewelry, 567 handbags, 423 watches and 234 sunglasses were confiscated last month from properties linked to Najib after the shocking electoral defeat of his long-ruling coalition. The police estimate the haul, the biggest in the country’s history, is worth over $273 million.
Lim told AP in an interview that the government will “try to monetize whatever we can.” He said the amount is a drop in the ocean compared to some 50 billion ringgit ($12.4 billion) of losses related to the defunct 1MDB investment fund set up by Najib, including from alleged outright theft and loans used to conceal the graft.
“We will try to monetize whatever we can, but bear in mind it is nothing compared to the amount that has been robbed from the state,” he said, adding he was stunned by the police seizure.