Wednesday, May 20, 2026
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Malaysia ex-PM Najib convicted of abuse of power in 1MDB trial

PUTRAJAYA – Former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak was found guilty on Friday of abusing his power in the 1MDB graft scandal, which saw billions plundered from the now-defunct sovereign wealth fund.

“The prosecution, I find, has thus proven its case against the accused beyond a reasonable doubt in respect of the first charge,” Judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah said, adding, “I therefore convict the accused of the first charge.”

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Since Najib’s 2018 election loss, investigations under successive governments have ensnared him and his wife Rosmah Mansor.

In the current court battle, the 72-year-old former leader stands accused of four counts of abuse of power and 21 counts of money laundering linked to a scandal that sparked probes in several countries, including the United States, and dented Malaysia’s international image.

Najib faces years more behind bars on top of the six-year jail term he is already serving after a conviction in a separate case related to the 1MDB fund.

The son of one of Malaysia’s founding fathers, Najib Razak was groomed for the prime minister’s post from a young age.

But after helming the country for nine years, Najib is now behind bars, serving a six-year sentence for graft linked to the plunder of Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund 1MDB.

Since his 2018 election loss, investigations under successive governments have ensnared Najib and wife Rosmah Mansor deeper in graft allegations.

It is a stunning reversal for a man who rose to power in 2009 promising reform amid calls to end the long-ruling coalition’s repressive tactics.

Najib initially promoted liberal views, repealing criticized security laws.

But many voters viewed the British-educated leader as an aloof elitist disconnected from ordinary Malaysians, a perception exacerbated by gaffes and unpopular moves like the 2015 goods and services tax, later scrapped.

Rosmah was also a constant lightning rod for critics due to her imperious manner and elaborately coiffed hair, which she once complained cost her 1,200 ringgit ($300) to style.

Malaysia’s minimum monthly wage at the time was 900 ringgit.

Then-prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has said Najib told him in 2015 that “cash is king” in maintaining political support in Malaysia, a phrase that opponents turned against Najib as a sign of his hubris and corruption.

Money and power appeared to act as a firewall protecting Najib through a scandal involving Malaysia’s 2002 purchase of French submarines while he was defence minister, a deal brokered by a close associate.

Kickback claims followed, and the deal was tainted by the murder of Mongolian negotiator Altantuya Shaariibuu, shot and blown up with military explosives near Kuala Lumpur.

Two police officers who were former bodyguards to Najib were convicted.

Najib also denied rumours that he had had an affair with 28-year-old Altantuya.

Launched by Najib in 2009 for development, 1MDB amassed debt after his re-election in 2013. Its missing funds were exposed around 2015.

Public outrage fueled Mahathir’s electoral win in 2018 and set the stage for the investigations into Najib.

Probes in the United States revealed that hundreds of millions of dollars of funding had been diverted from 1MDB into properties in Los Angeles, New York and London.

Millions more were funneled into art by Claude Monet and Vincent van Gogh, a private jet, and the production of the Hollywood movie “The Wolf of Wall Street” by Najib’s stepson.

A New York Times report also alleged some of the money was spent on jewelry for Rosmah.

Najib denied any wrongdoing but was sentenced in 2020 to 12 years in prison after a first trial over 42 million ringgit siphoned from former 1MDB subsidiary SRC International into his personal bank accounts.

He began serving the jail term two years later after losing all his appeals. The term was later halved by a pardons board.

Friday’s verdict is seen as the main case against Najib, who faces four counts of abuse of power to obtain some 2.28 billion ringgit from 1MDB funds, and 21 counts of money laundering.

Defense lawyers blamed Najib’s close associate, the fugitive businessman Jho Low, seen as the mastermind of the scheme.

A conviction could add years to Najib’s sentence and deal a further blow to his lingering influence within Malaysia’s oldest political party, the United Malays National Organization, which lost power in the 2018 election.

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