| The RM764 million “patronage” 
    of Daim Zainuddin as Finance Minister in 1991 to his two protégés 
    highlighted in the Court of Appeal judgment in Metramac Cheras Toll 
    concession case raised grave questions of integrity which should be top 
    agenda of the first meeting  of the Parliamentary Select Committee on 
    Integrity on Monday   
    ________________________________ 
    
    Media Statement (1)by  Lim Kit Siang
 ________________________________
 
 (Parliament, 
    Saturday): 
    The Court of Appeal judgment on 
    the Metramac Cheras Toll concession case on Thursday has raised grave 
    questions of integrity about the conduct of Tun Daim Zainuddin when he was 
    Finance Minister in 1991 involving a RM764 million “patronage” to his two 
    protégés, Datuk Halim Saad and Anuar Othman, which should be the top agenda 
    of the first meeting of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Integrity on 
    Monday.
 The RM764 
    million Daim “patronage” should be the first case study of the Parliamentary 
    Select Committee on Integrity in keeping with its terms of reference 
    focusing on ethics and integrity in the public service and society, 
    including proposals for amendments to laws and regulations and actions to be 
    taken by the relevant authorities The 
    Parliamentary Select Committee on Integrity, which was established by a 
    resolution of the Dewan Rakyat on December 8, 2005, is chaired by Tan Sri 
    Bernard Giluk Dompok, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department. Other 
    members are Lim Kit Siang (Ipoh Timur), Dato Dr. Wan Hashim bin Wan The (Gerik), 
    Ronah binti Abdul Rashid Shirlin (Papar), Teng Boon Soon (Tebrau), Dr. James 
    Dawos Mamit (Mambong), Devamany Krishnasamy (Cameron Highlands), Tan Lian 
    Hoe (Bukit Gantang), Datuk Richard Riot anak Jaem (Serian), Eric Enchin 
    Majimbun (Sepanggar), Edmund Chong Ket Wah (Batu Sapi) and Dato Hj. Ab. 
    Halim bin Ab. Rahman (Pengkalan Chepa). The judgment 
    of  Judge Datuk Gopal Sri Ram, as reported by New Straits Times 
    today, headlined “Halim, Anuar had patronage of Daim, says judge”,  
    laid out the facts resulting in the judge’s verdict of Daim’s patronage as 
    Finance Minister to his two protégés worth RM764 million: 
    It was puzzled why 
    the then Finance Minister Tun Daim Zainuddin said in 1990 that the Federal 
    Government was in no position to pay Syarikat Teratai KG Sdn Bhd 
    compensation of RM764 million in lieu of its toll concession being 
    terminated.
 But he seemed to sing a different tune a while later when another company 
    took over STKG.
 
 This is how the deal unfolded.
 
 In 1986, Fawziah Holdings, through STKG, succeeded in obtaining a tender 
    from DBKL to design, build and operate several roads in Kuala Lumpur. In 
    December 1988, four parties invested in STKG, bringing in RM65 million worth 
    of capital.
 
 DBKL suspended the toll collection in September 1990 after a demonstration 
    at the Cheras toll plaza. As a result, compensation of RM764 million was 
    payable by DBKL to STKG.
 
 In November 1990, UEM Bhd made an offer to purchase all the shares in STKG 
    for RM97.5 million. In reality, the shares were to be purchased by a company 
    nominated by UEM, namely Metro Juara, whose shareholders were Datuk Halim 
    Saad and Anuar Othman.
 
 Judge Datuk Gopal Sri Ram noted that STKG was between a rock and a hard 
    place. It had spent large sums of money on the project and now found "itself 
    with the ground cut from under its feet because of DBKL’s termination of the 
    first concession agreement".
 
 DBKL had terminated the contract because of a demonstration at the Cheras 
    toll plaza.
 
 "No one in his or her right mind will consider the choice of selling their 
    shares to Metro Juara at RM97.5 million as a choice at all. All the 
    independent evidence on record points to this being in reality a crude case 
    of economic duress presenting itself in a more subtle form."
 
 Sri Ram noted that the offer by UEM to buy out STKG’s shares for RM97.5 
    milllion simply did not make any commercial sense. "Here you have a company 
    that has just had its loan and shareholders capital wiped out in one stroke. 
    It had no money in the coffers. It had huge debts. It had no prospects of 
    receiving any compensation from DBKL. So why pay RM97.5 million for the 
    shares of such a company.
 
 "The answer is simple enough. Anuar and Halim had something which the 
    plaintiff did not. And that was the patronage of Daim," he said, adding that 
    the events leading to the takeover bears this out.
 
 He noted even before the restructure sale agreement was signed on Jan 23, 
    1991, Metro Juara wrote to DBKL about recommencing the toll collection and 
    re-negotiating the first concession agreement.
 
 "It would not have written such a letter unless everything had already been 
    out in place," he noted.
 
 Sri Ram added that the takeover of STKG by Metro Juara was also a rushed 
    transaction.
 
 "There was no examination of the defendant’s books. No warranties were asked 
    or given. No due diligence exercise was ever carried out."
 
 The takeover was executed on Jan 23, 1991.
 
 "Not long after the takeover, a strange thing happened. Where doors were 
    once closed to the defendant before its takeover, as if by the utterance of 
    a magic spell, all bureaucratic doors were opened to the defendant after its 
    takeover by Metro Juara. And as if by the rub of a magic lamp, the Federal 
    Government and DBKL, who hitherto, claimed to be impoverished, suddenly 
    found themselves flush with funds.
 
 "They were now in a financial position to compensate the defendant. The 
    figures are staggering. In one way or another, the defendant was to receive 
    a total sum of RM756.7 million," he said.
 The Court of 
    Appeal judgment also found a case of “aggravated form of CBT” in a separate 
    front-page NST report headlined “The Metramac Case –‘THEY TOOK RM32 m’”. The NST 
    reported: 
    Prominent 
    businessmen Datuk Halim Saad and Anuar Othman siphoned RM32.5 million from a 
    toll operator.
 By doing so, they could have been flirting with an aggravated form of 
    criminal breach of trust, an offence which carries a maximum 20-year jail 
    term with whipping and fine upon conviction.
 
 This was the damning finding of the Court of Appeal which ordered Metramac 
    Corporation Sdn Bhd to pay about RM65 million to a construction company in 
    compensation for loss of advertising rights.
 
 The court ruled on the case yesterday but released its written judgment 
    today.
 The question 
    is whether the Police will immediately  commence investigations into Halim 
    Saad and Anuar for aggravated form of CBT based on the Court of Appeal 
    judgment. Although the 
    counsel of toll concessionaire Metramac Corporation Sdn Bhd has announced 
    that application for  a stay of execution and an appeal to the Federal Court 
    against the decision of the Court of Appeal ordering the company to pay RM65 
    million to Fawziah Holdings Sdn Bhd for claims of a signage and advertising 
    agreement between the two parties would be filed on Monday, this has nothing 
    to do with criminal or corruption proceedings which would not be affected by 
    the outcome of any appeal. 
    (14/01/2006)
 
 
    *  Lim Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP
                          Central Policy and Strategic Planning Commission 
                          Chairman |