Mahathir sons declare assets in Malaysian corruption probe

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The sons said the MACC ordered them to assist in an investigation into their father, revealing for the first time that the probe was into Dr Mahathir.

The sons said the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission ordered them to assist in an investigation into their father, revealing for the first time that the probe was into Dr Mahathir.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia’s anti-corruption agency said Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s two eldest sons declared their assets on time in a months-long probe targeting the 99-year-old former premier, and it’s now seeking more information from them. 

“The investigation on the asset declaration is still ongoing,” Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) chief Azam Baki said at a briefing on Sept 18. “We are still engaging with them, to get more information.”

Back in January, the

anti-graft agency ordered Tan Sri Mokhzani Mahathir

and his elder brother Mirzan to declare their assets dating back to 1981, the year Dr Mahathir became prime minister.

The sons said in an interview with Bloomberg News in March that the agency ordered them to assist in an investigation into their father, revealing for the first time that

the probe was into Dr Mahathir

.

The brothers received a series of extensions of the original February deadlines to comply with the orders, with the final deadline set for the middle of September. 

The development comes after former finance minister Daim Zainuddin, one of Dr Mahathir’s closest allies, and his wife were

charged for failing to declare their assets

under a similar order.

Daim said in January that his prosecution was a vendetta by Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, which the Malaysian leader and the MACC deny.

Datuk Seri Anwar, who finally became prime minister in 2022 after falling short of the top job for decades, is a former protege of Dr Mahathir but later fell out with him.

Dr Mahathir dismissed Mr Anwar from all government posts in 1998 and Mr Anwar was later imprisoned on corruption and sodomy charges, which he denied. 

After he was removed from Dr Mahathir’s government, Mr Anwar became a prominent opposition figure who pushed for democratic reforms and was courted by the West.

But since taking power, his government has faced criticism from opposition parties for using a colonial-era sedition law to stifle dissent and after the Attorney-General

withdrew criminal charges against a key coalition ally

, Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi. 

Mr Anwar has repeatedly denied interfering in Datuk Seri Zahid’s case or in the MACC’s investigations.

Dr Mahathir, who led Malaysia for nearly a quarter-century in two different stints, said at a press briefing in January – conducted before Mokhzani was ordered to declare his assets – that the probe involving his son Mirzan was politically motivated. He has denied wrongdoing. BLOOMBERG

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