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Swiss man met 'buyers of data on Malaysian PM in Thailand'


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THAI-MALAYSIAN RELATIONS
Swiss man met 'buyers of data on Malaysian PM in Thailand'
The Nation

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BANGKOK: -- THAILAND WAS used as a meeting venue between a Swiss suspect held here for blackmail and the potential buyers of information intended to discredit Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, the Singapore-based Straits Times newspaper reported online.

The paper quoted Thai police spokesman Lt-General Prawut Thavornsiri as saying that Xavier Justo met three times with a Malaysia-born female news blogger who had moved to Britain to negotiate the purchase of information and data. Prawut based his information on the confession of Justo, who he said had admitted to everything and surrendered a document, even records from his phone.

The suspect was arrested late last month in Surat Thani's Koh Samui district for allegedly trying to blackmail a Saudi oil company.

Prawut said Justo named about 10 people from the media and political circles, even from the same party as Najib, who wanted to buy the information he had allegedly taken from PetroSaudi.

Prawut said Justo met the Malaysia-born woman three times in Thailand, and also in Singapore, for "negotiation". Asked if the woman's blog was the Sarawak Report website, he said: "Maybe. I didn't name it, you named it. The website tampered with the data to discredit the [Malaysian] PM."

The evidence from Justo allegedly included a full transcript of all the WhatsApp chats he had with the group during their negotiations and discussions on how he would be paid.

"This case should be reported in Singapore because the money-laundering to attack the PM started in Singapore," Prawut said. "If the Singapore police ask me for evidence [through] the foreign affairs protocol, I can send it."

The suspect had worked for PetroSaudi from 2010 to 2011 and the chief executive officer was Justo's close friend. Justo walked out and the company paid him about 4 million Swiss francs (Bt140 million).

After two years, Justo called the CEO again and asked for more money. Before he left, he had copied every e-mail of the company from the server. "It was in 2013 that he called the company and said I know all your secrets and I want US$2.5million. When the firm turned down his demand, Justo approached the other group," Prawut said.

Justo will be charged with blackmail, Prawut told The Straits Times.

Malaysia Development, a state investment agency chaired by Najib, has invested in PetroSaudi while allegations claimed that Najib received money from the investment in that company. Najib, who is facing calls for his resignation, has denied ever using state funds for "personal gain"

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/national/Swiss-man-met-buyers-of-data-on-Malaysian-PM-in-Th-30264706.html

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-- The Nation 2015-07-18

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Pot/Kettle/Black

Who ever heard of a Malaysian politician smearing anyone - except that Deputy PM Anwar Ibrahim accused of gay sex with an intern and imprisoned for 9 years.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anwar_Ibrahim_sodomy_trials

But apart from that - yesterday's The Age spills big on allegations of corruptions at the top?

http://www.theage.com.au/comment/mahathir-has-lost-control-of--his-puppet-20150717-gidig9

None of which absolves this Swiss geezer from blackmail.

Edited by Manbing
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Surprise, surprise! Thailand isn't keen on investigative journalists. I wonder why?

It seems Mahathir didn't have much luck maintaining control through proxies, he should have used family like they do here. Only problem is his son was exposed as a crook years ago.

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a Malaysia-born female news blogger who had moved to Britain

That's one way to describe a British investigative journalist, who was born to British parents in the former Crown Colony of Sarawak.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clare_Rewcastle_Brown

http://www.sarawakreport.org/2015/06/open-letter-to-the-swiss-foreign-ministry-in-bern/

Edited by Morakot
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