Written by Admin
Thursday 27 February 2014
BY: KURAPANAU A/L BADASAMIE
KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 26 ― Sabah timber tycoon Michael Chia Thien Foh was sentenced to a one-year jail term and one stroke of the rattan today after a Sandakan Sessions Court found him guilty in a decade-old cheating scandal
involving some RM2.5 million.
Chia ― who has previously
been alleged to have close ties to the Sabah administration led by Chief
Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman ― was charged with tricking Datuk Agus Hassan of
RM2.5 million in a logging-related matter in 2004 by claiming that it
was meant for Umno's political funds.
The court, however,
allowed an application by Chia's lawyer Rowiena Rashid to defer the sentence
while he files for an appeal at the High Court, the Malaysian
Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) said in a statement today.
Chia was charged under
Section 420 of the Penal Code, read together with Section 511 of the same
law.
The businessman was said to have cheated Syarikat Peluamas
Sdn Bhd's Agus into believing that he needed to pay RM3 million in political
funds for Sabah Umno as one of the three conditions to obtain a letter for a
timber-logging operation in the state's Kalabakan Forest Reserve.
The two other conditions
were the surrendering of rights to purchase 100,000 cubic meters of
timber to Rakyat Berjaya Sdn Bhd/ Innoprise
Corporation Sdn Bhd, a subsidiary of state-owned Yayasan Sabah, as well as a
RM25 commission per cubic meter for every meter of timber logged by
In her judgment today, Sessions Court
judge Elsie Primus said the defence team had failed to raise reasonable
doubt in the prosecution's case against Chia.
In her grounds for judgment,
Primus noted that the prosecution’s witness had testified that Chia had
asked him for money purportedly to fund Umno in order to get the logging
document.
According to MACC, the
judge noted that the the claim affected Umno's image as the witness also
testified that the party did not seek such
political funds.
Chia's name previously made
the headlines in April 2012, when whistleblower website Sarawak Report claimed
he was caught trying to smuggle RM40 million worth of Singaporean currency from
the Hong Kong International Airport
to Malaysia in 2008.
Chia had purportedly told
the authorities that the money was meant for Musa, resulting in a probe on
international fund transfers that was then
believed to be tied to possible money-laundering activities connected to
illegal timber-felling in Sabah.
But in October 2012,
minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Aziz told Parliament that the MACC had cleared Musa
of corruption after it found that the RM40 million was not for his
personal use, but was a “political donation” to Sabah Umno.
Pakatan Rakyat (PR) lawmakers later disputed Putrajaya's
declaration of Musa's innocence, saying that it did not show evidence that the
Hong Kong's anti-graft agency ICAC had cleared him on its own.
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