More Special Pleading From 1MDB’s Mega-Thieves
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David Cameron has pressed the Malaysian prime minister Najib
Razak over claims he has imprisoned his political opponents and taken
government money for personal gain, at a private meeting between the two men in
Kuala Lumpur.
In a meeting at Najib’s residence, Cameron also urged his
Malaysian counterpart to accept the importance of a free press, the need for
ethics in business, and the fight against corruption. He stressed the
importance of an open economy and open society.
Cameron has made the fight against corruption a key theme of
his four-day trade mission to south-east Asia, and the British prime minister
had arrived in Malaysia in the week in which corruption claims prompted Najib
to sack both the attorney general, who had been investigating him, and his own
deputy, who had been a prominent critic.
NEW YORK - An eight-year-old American has become the
world’s youngest recipient of a transplant of both hands, Children’s Hospital
of Philadelphia announced Tuesday.
It took a team of 40 doctors, nurses and other staff from
plastic and reconstructive surgery, orthopedic surgery, anesthesiology and
radiology, to pull off the pioneering surgery.
Harvey is receiving daily anti-rejection medications.
Doctors said he should be able to return home to Baltimore in a few weeks.
KATHMANDU, Nepal – Some 2.5 million worshippers sacrificed
an estimated 200,000 animals during the most recent instalment of the Gadhimai
festival held last November in the village of Bariyapur near the Indian border.
The festival, held once every five years, sees hordes of
devotees from Nepal and India flock to a temple in the Himalayan nation’s
southern plains to sacrifice thousands of animals in the hope of appeasing the
Hindu goddess of power, Gadhimai.
However in a victory for activists, Nepalese temple
authorities said Tuesday they would end a centuries-old Hindu tradition of mass
animal slaughter that attracts hundreds of thousands of worshippers.
Animal rights activists applauded the decision, which came
after years spent lobbying temple authorities and the Nepal government in a
campaign that attracted support from celebrities including British actress
Joanna Lumley and French movie legend Brigitte Bardot.
“We have decided to
completely stop the practice of animal sacrifice,” said Motilal Prasad,
secretary of the Gadhimai Temple Trust, which organises the celebrations.
KUALA LUMPUR: Embattled Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak
on Tuesday sacked his deputy premier and attorney general as part of a major
cabinet reshuffle widely seen as an attempt to tighten his hold on office amid
corruption allegations.
Calls for Najib to step down mounted earlier this month
after a Wall Street Journal report that Malaysian government investigators had
discovered nearly $700 million had been routed to Najib’s personal bank
accounts.
In a televised address, Najib announced he had dumped Deputy
Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, who has been critical of Najib’s handling of
the affair and has called for more transparency.
In total, nine ministers were replaced in the cabinet
reshuffle that Najib said was aimed at creating a more “unified team” ahead of the
next elections due by 2018.
The Prime Minister's Office has released a statement saying
everyone especially members of the administration including Deputy Prime
Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin should wait for the outcome of the probe into
1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB).
"Therefore, all parties – especially those from the
government, including Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin – should
wait for the findings of the investigation to be released.
"It would be wise not to make statements that could
cloud the people's perception of the country's leaders, the government and
Umno," the statement read.
"In this regard, the actions of former prime minister
Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad in making unsubstantiated accusations, including the
loss of 1MDB's RM42bil despite clarification provided by the government, have
contributed to the erosion of confidence in the government and the party,"
it added.
A woman was killed after she plunged through flooring over
an escalator in a Chinese department store, reports said Monday, thrusting her
toddler to safety as she fell to her death.

As she fell
half-way through she pushed her son forward, and a nearby shop assistant
dragged him to safety.
Discount carrier AirAsia on Monday called for urgent repairs
at Malaysia's new budget airline terminal, claiming the tarmac was
"sinking".
AirAsia chief Tony Fernandes criticised Malaysian aviation
officials after a plane came off its chocks, a block that braces the wheel, at
the KLIA2 terminal in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, causing an eight-hour delay.
The settling "has been anticipated from the start of
construction", the company was quoted as saying, adding that the airport
was addressing the issue by patching and resurfacing problem areas and
injecting polyurethane under the ground.
NAIROBI, Kenya – US President Barack Obama joked about
Kenyan family politics and vowed Saturday to return again to his father’s
homeland, sketching plans for philanthropic work in the country once he leaves office.
“The next time I’m back, I may not be wearing a suit,” he
joked as US military helicopters whirred overhead and Secret Service agents
stood left, right and centre – a constant reminder of the bubble that surrounds
any US president.
“My hope is some of the work I do after the presidency is
over builds on what we have been doing now. I’m not going to stop being
interested in the young people of Kenya and Africa, developing talent and
leaders and entrepreneurs that are going to help make this country and the
world prosper,” he said.
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia - Opposition leaders have criticized
the timing of British Prime Minister David Cameron's visit to Malaysia next
week, saying it could send a signal that Downing Street was indifferent to
allegations surrounding Datuk Seri Najib Razak in the 1Malaysia Development
Berhad (1MDB) scandal.
Britain's Financial Times (FT) quoted PKR vice-president
Nurul Izzah Anwar as saying that Cameron’s visit could show the UK government
was not concerned about “the current scandal-ridden ground on which Najib
treads”, while DAP's Tony Pua warned that any support to Najib would taint
Britain's image "as a country which supports democratic principles and
good governance”.
Malaysia is a longstanding partner of the UK and the
relationship is important for our prosperity and security, FT quoted a
source in Downing Street as saying.
ATHEN, Greece - Hundreds of cats
are loose on the streets, and food is running low for some residents of Athens'
zoo. It isn't just humans who are suffering as Greece tries to claw its way out
of economic crisis.
The Frenchman had been trying for
days to place a 6,000 euro ($6,600) order of frozen fish for the zoo's six
dolphins. Without fresh supplies from abroad, he feared he would have to put
them on a diet.
The measures have stopped the
flight of cash from the debt-crippled country but in doing so have made life
extremely difficult for Greek firms that do business abroad.
Lesueur, who is in his seventies,
finally managed to get the dolphin food payment approved late Thursday.
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysian
authorities have suspended publication of a business daily whose aggressive
reporting on a financial scandal has rocked the government, a move the
newspaper and media groups decried Friday as a grave breach of press freedom.
In a notice dated Thursday, the
Home Ministry suspended the publishing permits of The Edge Media Group for
three months, saying its reporting on the scandal swirling around state-owned
company 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) threatened "public
order".
The Edge has published a series
of exposes over the past year detailing alleged fraud, mismanagement and
misappropriation of funds surrounding 1MDB, which is closely linked to Prime
Minister Najib Razak.
The suspension, effective from
July 27, applies to print outlets The Edge Financial Daily and The Edge Weekly,
Ho said, adding that the company would fight the suspension in court.