______________
danildaud,
Soon the Peaceful Assembly which has been approved by Dewan Rakyat and endorsed by Dewan Negara will be become law after Royal Accent. That option is going to be difficult as protestors will be violating the law.–Din Merican
Squandered is the key word here… tell me does this MACC-chief knows what he is saying?
Yea , the rakyat have been short change big time with the promised of a cheaper source of venison meat … Nay , the funds were never squandered since its release. Embezzled if you like but not squandered..
If there is any truth of Sayalazat’s alleged promiscuous past…spreading her legs this time round will not be such a good idea no-more . The flesh has turned from raw , fresh to rotten..
I don’t know if anybody in MACC knows what they are doing but I do know that the language used suggests that Sharizat is being set up for a ‘no case to answer’ before the issue even gets to our courts.
‘Squander” is not part of any legal language to refer to crimes committed under the country’s Penal Code.
Dato,
Has Malaysia changed so much after I left that even our Agong talks with an accent?
MACC Probe on NFC
December 22, 2011
 Amid  signs that Prime Minister Najib Razak’s UMNO is fast unraveling, hit by  massive graft and infighting amongst its top leadership, the Malaysian  Anti-Corruption Commission has announced that a special team will be  formed to investigate claims that UMNO Minister Shahrizat Jalil’s family  had squandered public funds allocated to the RM250 million NFC cattle  livestock project on personal items and luxurious assets.
Amid  signs that Prime Minister Najib Razak’s UMNO is fast unraveling, hit by  massive graft and infighting amongst its top leadership, the Malaysian  Anti-Corruption Commission has announced that a special team will be  formed to investigate claims that UMNO Minister Shahrizat Jalil’s family  had squandered public funds allocated to the RM250 million NFC cattle  livestock project on personal items and luxurious assets.
 Given  the tone of the statement, it was clear to political watchers that the  MACC was not going to do much to uncover the dirt in NFC or National  Feedlot Centre, a project aimed to raise local supply of beef to up to  40% of consumption and keep prices affordable.
Given  the tone of the statement, it was clear to political watchers that the  MACC was not going to do much to uncover the dirt in NFC or National  Feedlot Centre, a project aimed to raise local supply of beef to up to  40% of consumption and keep prices affordable.
MACC Probe on NFC: Another Political Sandiwara in the Making?
by Wong Choon Mei, Malaysia ChronicleHowever, instead of appeasing public  anger, all eyes are now on the drama at play in UMNO. While Shahrizat  has hinted she was ready to quit, it is unlikely that she will allow  herself to be railroaded or be made an easy scapegoat of by her own  party mates.
All eyes are now on how Najib, himself  the subject of a probe by the French government over allegations of  having taken a 114 million euros or RM570 million kickback from French  naval giant DCN for the purchase of 2 Scorpene submarines, will deal  with the issue. Najib is also the UMNO President.
“Tell me, which UMNO leader does not have  problem?” was Shahrizat’s sharp retort when asked to comment whether  she would heed the growing calls to resign, as reported in the Sin Chew  newspaper a few days ago.
Lip service expected from the MACCIndeed, public cynicism is inevitable  given that the MACC had previously passed the buck to the police despite  receiving reports from Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim’s Parti Keadilan  Rakyat.
The Najib administration lost further credibility when Deputy Inspector General of Police Khalid  Bakar  publicly declared there were no elements of criminal breach of trust  during the recent UMNO General Assembly. Khalid, often called a stooge  for the UMNO-led government, was accused of ‘play-acting’ in a bid to  save the UMNO leaders embarrassment.
Bakar  publicly declared there were no elements of criminal breach of trust  during the recent UMNO General Assembly. Khalid, often called a stooge  for the UMNO-led government, was accused of ‘play-acting’ in a bid to  save the UMNO leaders embarrassment.
“We have acted accordingly by collecting  evidence and statements since the issue was reported in the  Auditor-General’s Report. A large part of the issues brought up in the  latest complaint (against NFC) had already been acted upon,” a  defensive-sounding MACC investigations director Mustafar Ali said in a  statement released on Thursday.
The MACC was also quick to stress it  could not divulge details of investigations as stipulated under Section  29(4) of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Act 2009. “We call on  the parties to give their full co-operation by not politicising the  issues which could affect our investigation,” Mustafar added.
The project was awarded to Shahrizat’s  husband, Salleh Ismail, and her children in 2006 by then then  Agriculture minister Muhyiddin Yassin on the prodding of UMNO Youth  Chief Khairy Jamaluddin, the son-in-law of former premier Abdullah  Badawi. Najib also played a part in approving the project to Shahrizat’s  family.
Another shameless sandiwara
Cynicism is high that this was the latest  ‘sandiwara’ or drama enacted by UMNO to tell Shahrizat to quit her  Cabinet post and take responsibility before general elections are held  next year.
No one is expecting any major change in  the attitude of the top UMNO leaders, who are renowned for their  corruption-tainted records – as Shahrizat herself alluded to.
“Both Shahrizat and UMNO are shameless.  The issue is why such a loan was given to her family when she was  holding the position of a Cabinet minister. It is impossible they could  have got the loan if she were not a minister. She and her family have  deprived needy and hardworking Malaysians from the benefit of the fund  (meant to supply everyday Malaysians with a cheap source of beef),” PKR  vice president N Surendran told Malaysia Chronicle.
“It is also pointless to blame Shahrizat  alone. UMNO bears the biggest blame. Benefiting cronies and families  from public funds is a central part of UMNO’s political culture.”
Victim of the Mahathir legacy of corruption?Furthermore, those who have called on her  to quit before she is “chased out” include former premier Mahathir  Mohamad, notorious for defining and expanding UMNO’s feudal system of  politics where the ruling elite have carte blanche over almost every aspect of economic and political life in Malaysia.
In the recently released Global Financial  Integrity report, Malaysia was identified to be the 4th most corrupt  nation in the world, racking up a total of US$338 billion (RM1.08  trillion) in illicit outflows over the first decade of the century.
GFI also said the Malaysian increase was  “at a scale seen in few Asian countries.” In January, it had reported  that RM930 billion flowed out of Malaysia from 2000 to 2008, growing to  RM218 billion per year from an initial RM71 billion in that period.
“This report should be a wake-up call to  world leaders that more must be done to address these harmful outflows,”  GFI director Raymond Baker said in a press release.
Upon release of the GFI’s report in  January, it was telling that one of the first UMNO leaders to cast doubt  on the renowned Washington-based body was Mukhriz Mahathir, the  youngest son of the former PM. Now 86, Mahathir had ruled Malaysia for  22 years and is widely believed to be the one who has salted away the  biggest fortune at taxpayers’ expense.
Malaysia Chronicle