Compliance
Compliance Corner: Malaysia

The latest compliance issues in wealth management across Asia-Pacific.
Malaysia
A leader with the main Malaysian opposition political party, Umno
(United Malays National Organisation) has been arrested by
authorities in the Asian country and will be brought to face
criminal charges linked to corruption, reports said.
Umno supreme council member Abdul Azeez Abdul Rahim was arrested
by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission earlier this week,
and was due to face charges yesterday, according to the
Straits Times (of Singapore).
Datuk Seri Abdul Azeez, who is also the Baling MP, is expected to
face charges of money laundering at the Kuala Lumpur Sessions
Court, the publication said.
Abdul Azeez, who was the chairman of Malaysia's Muslim pilgrimage
savings fund Tabung Haji (TH) until his resignation on 14
May last year after Pakatan Harapan won the general
election, was previously arrested by the MACC in September and
remanded for a total of 10 days.
The arrest appears unrelated to the drama around Malaysia’s 1MDB
state-established fund, from which it is alleged billions of
dollars were siphoned off, creating an international corruption
scandal.
Goldman Sachs
A senior Malaysian official reportedly attacked Goldman Sachs for
its alleged role in the 1MDB scandal, doubting the firm's claim
that the blame lies with a few rogue employees.
"We have suffered extremely large losses, and you were the
financial adviser," Lim Guan Eng, the finance minister of
Malaysia, was quoted by Business Insider as saying,
referring to Goldman Sachs in an interview with the New York
Times on Monday this week.
To see other stories about the 1MDB case, see examples here
and here.