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Malaysia 1MDB scandal
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Malaysian website editors charged with ‘intent to annoy’ over 1MDB coverage

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Editor of MalaysiaKini.com, Steven Gan, in 2001. Photo: Reuters
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The co-founders of an independent news website that has reported extensively on a corruption scandal involving Malaysia’s prime minister, Najib Razak, have been charged with offences including “intent to annoy”.

Facing up to one year in jail, the editors appeared before a recently set up “special cyber court” in Kuala Lumpur on Friday. Human Rights Watch said the use of the court was part of a strategy aimed at “shutting down the vibrant and diverse online news environment”.

The charges relate to a video posted on the Malaysiakini website of sacked ruling party member Khairuddin Abu Hassan criticising the attorney general at a press conference for being close with cabinet ministers, which he argued would undermine his independence to investigate government corruption.

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A woman walks past street art depicting Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak with a clown face by activist and artist Fahmi Reza ahead of a protest in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: EPA
A woman walks past street art depicting Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak with a clown face by activist and artist Fahmi Reza ahead of a protest in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: EPA

The Najib scandal emerged in July 2015 when media reports said investigators had found that hundreds of millions of dollars from the 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) state fund was transferred into the prime minister’s bank accounts .

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But attorney general Mohamed Apandi Ali closed all domestic investigations in January, clearing Najib and saying US$681 million transferred into his personal bank account was a gift from the royal family in Saudi Arabia.

Malaysiakini’s editor-in-chief, Steven Gan, and co-founder, Premesh Chandran, have faced repeated harassment from Najib’s supporters, including when hundreds of protesters tried to forcibly shut down their offices earlier in November.

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