LONDON, Jan 18, 2015: Sarawak Governor Abdul Taib Mahmud failed to
turn up at the Free World Centre here where he was supposed to explain financial position.
A chair reserved for Malaysia’s longest-serving
politician at a panel discussion in London last night remained empty.
Picture: A empty chair (left) was reserved for Taib Mahmud or his legal representative. The panelists (from left to right) are Jettie Word (The Borneo Project), See Chee How (State assemblyman for Batu Lintang), Lukas Straumann (Bruno Manser Fund), Clare Rewcastle (Sarawak Report / Radio Free Sarawak), Mark Gregory (FERN).
Neither the Sarawak Governor nor his London lawyers,
Mishcon de Reya, turned up at the launch of Money Logging: On the Trail of the
Asian Timber Mafia by Lukas Straumann, a non-fiction book whose appearance Taib
had in vain tried to stop.
Author Lukas Straumann had challenged the Sarawak
Governor to participate in the event and explain the sources of his wealth
after Taib had been described by his lawyers as an "ultra high net worth
individual“.
In a letter to Straumann released today, Mishco de Reya
refused to clarify how their client had lawfully acquired his wealth during 51
years in office as a cabinet minister and said "the onus is on you to
prove your own allegations to be true, not upon our client to disprove them.“
Lukas Strausmann |
In his book Money Logging, Straumann accused the Sarawak
Governor of criminal offences such as grand corruption and misconduct in public
office, allegations that Taib was unable to disprove.
Mishcon de Reya also failed to justify why Taib’s nine
siblings, his four children and his cousin had simultaneously become extremely
wealthy after their family head had become Chief Minister of Sarawak in 1981.
On Thursday, Mishcon de Reya also threatened legal action
against the BBC were they to broadcast an interview conducted with Straumann on
Taib corruption in Sarawak.
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