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Stolen jet engines found

SE Asia
Home > Breaking News > SE Asia > Story
Feb 6, 2010

Stolen jet engines found

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jetengine-thestar.jpg


The engine that was found in Montevideo, Uruguay. -- PHOTO: THE STAR/ANN


<!-- story content : start --> KUALA LUMPUR - TWO missing US-made fighter jet engines, worth US$29 million ($40.6 million) and stolen from a Malaysian military airbase, have been traced to Uruguay, a report said on Saturday. Attorney general Abdul Gani Patail said Kuala Lumpur was informed about the discovery by Montevideo and had made moves to secure the return of the engines. 'We have sought the assistance of the relevant authorities in Uruguay to seek confirmation on the location of the engines and their subsequent return,' he was quoted as saying by the Star newspaper. The Malaysian government is facing a storm of criticism over allegations of official corruption after the theft of the engines.

Last month a Malaysian air force sergeant and a businessman were charged over the theft. The accused pair both pleaded not guilty. The two Northrop F-5E jet engines were reportedly sold on the black market to a South American company after being taken from a military airbase, apparently last year. Police initially traced the engines to Argentina. Armed forces chief Azizan Ariffin has said the theft was only the 'tip of the iceberg' after an audit revealed equipment worth millions of ringgit was missing including other jet fighter parts. A number of countries subject to US arms embargoes, including Iran, Sudan and Venezuela, have F-5 fighters that use the antiquated engines. The jet first flew in 1963 and Northrop ended production in 1989. -- AFP



 
Malaysian accused of engine theft alleges torture


Malaysian accused of engine theft alleges torture

Eileen Ng, Associated Press, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Thu, 06/17/2010 3:47 PM | World A | A | A |

A Malaysian air force sergeant charged with stealing two fighter jet engines from a military warehouse has accused senior officers of torturing him to confess in a complaint lodged with police Thursday. Prosecutors said the US-made engines were stolen in 2007 while they were undergoing repairs and smuggled to South America. Malaysian authorities are seeking the return of the engines, which were traced in Montevideo, Uruguay. Officials have said the engines, purchased in 1972 for single-seat fighter and reconnaissance jets, cost 303,570 ringgit ($92,000) each.

N. Tharmendran was charged in January with the theft, which a local newspaper first publicized a month earlier, prompting opposition criticism that senior government or military figures may have been involved and the case covered up. Before he was charged, however, Tharmendran was detained illegally at an army camp, according to his lawyer N. Surendran, and tortured for more than a month. Police and defense ministry officials couldn't be immediately reached for comment.

Tharmendran, 42, was made to wear a crash helmet before two army majors used golf clubs and cricket bats to hit his head to avoid leaving any marks, Surendran said. Tharmendran was also stripped down to his underwear in an air-conditioned room and deprived of sleep, he said. Surendran said his client is not sure whether he signed a confession while in custody because he was too traumatized to think properly. He and a businessman who was charged in connection with the theft have pleaded not guilty. "Tharmendran is the fall guy. He is innocent and was beaten to make him confess," Surendran said. Tharmendran was released after he challenged his detention in court.

He did not immediately lodge a complaint because he was afraid, Surendran said. On Thursday, his father, N. Nagarajah, filed a report with police in Kuala Lumpur, detailing the alleged torture. "Many powerful people are involved but they are putting the blame on my son," Nagarajah said. Surendran said a low-ranking staff like Tharmendran couldn't have pulled off the theft as approval from the higher-ups was needed to remove the huge engines from the army base. It is unclear if Tharmendran knows who the mastermind is. Tharmendran, 42, faces a maximum jail term of 10 years. His trial is due to start July 19.


 
cannot be a one man job. it not one but two engines. how the fark he move them off the base without help. And wont anyone notice when the engines went missing.
 
cannot be a one man job. it not one but two engines. how the fark he move them off the base without help. And wont anyone notice when the engines went missing.

Agree. Jet engine cannot fit in to car. Must use lorry. So big how can one man show.
At least a group is involve but the Ah Neh become scapegoat.
 
Grand Theft Malaysia

Grand Theft Malaysia


Many snouts in the public trough

Mahathir also was behind an attempt by the then governor of Bank Negara, the central bank, to aggressively speculate in the global foreign exchange market. Bank Negara ended up losing an estimated RM20 billion. The governor, Jaffar Hussein, and the head of forex trading, Nor Mohamed Yakcop were forced to resign.



The Port Klang Free Zone scandal may be big, but it is only the latest in a long line of Malaysian scandals going back to the early 1980s. Time Magazine quoted Daniel Lian, a Southeast Asia economist at Morgan Stanley in Singapore, saying that the country might have lost as much as U$100 billion since the early 1980s to corruption."

The scandals listed below are only a small sample of the looting of the country's coffers:

In July of 1983, what was then the biggest banking scandal in world history erupted in Hong Kong, when it was discovered that Bumiputra Malaysia Finance (BMF), a unit of Bank Bumiputra Malaysia Bhd, had lost as much as US$1 billion which had been siphoned off by prominent public figures into private bank accounts. The story involved murder, suicide and the involvement of officials at the very top of the Malaysian government. Ultimately it involved a bailout by the Malaysian government amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars.

Mak Foon Tan, the murderer of Jalil Ibraim, a Bank Bumi assistant manager who was sent to Hong Kong to investigate the disappearance of the money, was given a death sentence, and Malaysian businessman George Tan who had participated in looting most of the funds, was jailed after his Carrian Group collapsed in what was then Hong Kong's biggest bankruptcy, and a handful of others were charged. No major politician was ever punished in Malaysia despite a white paper prepared by an independent commission that cited cabinet minutes of Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad giving an okay to a request to throw more money into the scandal in an effort to contain it.

That was just the first Bank Bumi scandal. The government-owned bank had to be rescued twice more with additional losses of nearly US$600 million in today's dollars. Ultimately government officials gave up and the bank was absorbed into CIMB Group, currently headed by Nazir Razak, the prime minister's brother. That scandal, which stretched over several years before its denouement in 1985, set the tone for 24 years of similar scandals related to top Malaysian officials and was the first to prove that in Malaysia, you can not only get away with murder, you can get away with looting the treasury as well.

Perwaja Steel, for instance, lost US$800 million and its boss, Eric Chia, a crony of Mahathir's, was charged with looting the company. He stood trial, but was acquitted without having to put on a defense.

In the mid 1980s, the Co-operative Central Bank, a bank set up to aid the Indian smallholder community, had to be rescued by Bank Negara, the country's central bank, after hundreds of millions of ringgit in loans granted to a flock of United Malays National Organisation and Malaysian Indian Congress politicians became non-performing. Some had never been serviced at all. Although the chief executive and general manager were charged with criminal breach of trust, none of the politicians were ever charged.

Before that, the Malaysian government was believed to have lost US$500 million in an attempt at Mahathir's urging to corner the London tin market through a company called Maminco, driving the world price of tin from US$4.50 per tonne to US$7.50. It then sought to cover up the loss by establishing a US$2 company called Mukawasa from which allocations of new share issues to the government's Employees Provident Funds' were diverted. Mukawasa expected to sell the shares at a windfall profit to hide the tin speculation.

Mahathir also was behind an attempt by the then governor of Bank Negara, the central bank, to aggressively speculate in the global foreign exchange market. Bank Negara ended up losing an estimated RM20 billion. The governor, Jaffar Hussein, and the head of forex trading, Nor Mohamed Yakcop were forced to resign.

There have been many other political and financial scandals since. In 2005, Bank Islam Malaysia, the country's flagship Islamic bank, reported losses of RM457 million mainly due to provisioning totaling RM774 million as a result of bad loans and investments incurred by its Labuan branch. Cumulatively, Bank Islam ran up nonperforming loans of RM2.2 billion, partly from mismanagement and poor internal controls but also "years of regulatory indifference fueled by the misconceived notion of an untouchable Bank Islam because it was a favorite child of the Malaysian government, being the first and model Islamic bank in the country and region," according to a December 19, 2005 article in Arab News.

"Bank Islam had a reputation in the market for being the spoilt child of the Malaysian Ministry of Finance; and the perception of the bank was more of a Muslim financial fraternity or government development financial institution," the report said.

In 2007, in what was called Malaysia's Enron scandal, the publicly traded Transmile Group Bhd, whose chairman was former MCA President and Cabinet Minister Ling Liong Sik, was caught having overstated its revenue by RM530 million. A pretax profit from Rm207 million in 2006 was actually a loss of RM126 million, and a pretax profit of 120 million in 2005 was a loss of RM77 million, causing the government postal company Pos Malaysia & Services Holdings Bhd to warn that its earnings for the 2006 financial year might be affected by the reported overstatement, as the postal group owned 15.3 percent of Transmile.

Over the years 2001 to 2006, the government had to spend billions to rescue seven privatized projects including Kuala Lumpur's two public transport systems, the perennially ailing Malaysia Airlines, the national sewage system and a variety of others that, in the words of one study, "had been privatized prematurely." The government also repeatedly bailed out highway construction concessionaires, all of them closely connected to Umno, to the tune of another RM38.5 billion.

In 2008, it was revealed that Rafidah Aziz, who had served as trade and industry minister for 18 years, had been peddling approved permits for duty-free car sales and allegedly lining her pockets. Two companies which didn't even have showrooms – one of which belonged to the husband of Rafidah's niece – received scores of permits. Although Rafidah came in for heavy criticism from within Umno, she remained in office until she was defeated in party elections.

In the 1960s, federal prosecutors in the United States who were attempting to jail the late labor boss Jimmy Hoffa for looting the Teamsters Pension Fund of millions of dollars with his cronies were puzzled by the fact that their revelations appeared to have little effect on the union's rank and file. It was because no matter how much money Hoffa and his cronies stole, there was always money left because the fund was so rich. That appears to be the case with Malaysia.


Asia Sentinel:http://www.malaysia-today.net/index...aysia-&catid=21:special-reports&Itemid=100135


Approved Permit(AP) Scandal : 70,000 APs was dished to only 4 inter-related parties and instant millionares were created. Rafidah was guilty liked hell but under the auspicious patronage of her Chief-in-Thief, Tun Apanama, all is forgiven and swept under the rug and out popped the specimen of Anwar's DNA.:o:o:o
 
Re: Jet Engines Jalan-Jalan...

Theft and cover-up: Speaker involved, says MP


By Rahmah Ghazali

KUALA LUMPUR: The Dewan Rakyat Speaker is entangled in a conspiracy to cover up misdeeds linked to the theft of jet engines from the Air Force, Teluk Intan MP M Manogaran alleged today.

“The speaker is playing games,” said DAP’s Manogaran in reference to Pandikar Amin Mulia’s rejection of a motion to discuss Sergeant N Tharmendran’s allegation that he was tortured into confessing that he stole the engines.

He accused Pandikar Amin of being in cahoots with the Prime Minister, the Attorney-General, the Defence Ministry and the police.

Manogaran is Tharmendran’s lawyer. The motion was brought to the speaker’s chambers by Kapar MP, PKR’s S Manikavasagam. Pandikar Amin said the matter, although of public interest, was not urgent.

Speaking at a press conference, Manogaran spoke of a “very serious conspiracy” involving, among others, the defence minister at the time of the theft, Najib Tun Razak.

“There is a cover-up and I am sad that Parliament is involved.

“This was a perfect opportunity for Parliament to allow the members to debate this matter but they knocked it out.

“They are playing games. The speaker is playing games.”

Harassed by air force

Tharmendran, who was held in Sungai Buloh prison for six months, claims that military intelligence officers tortured him to extract the confession.

He was charged together with Rajandran Prasad Kusy with the theft of the two engines at the Subang Air Force base in December 2007.

Tharmendran, 42, had been with the air force for 21 years when he was sacked last May 28.

However, he was informed yesterday that he was needed back for duty and that he would be placed in military prison if he did not turn up.

“Now the air force is harassing me,” Tharmendran told reporters. “They said they would put me in military lockup again. During my detention for many months in Sungai Buloh, they didn’t bother to come and ask what was going on with me.

“Now after my family and lawyers have done so much to get me out, they are trying to make me go back to duty.”

Tharmendran was released on bail by the Petaling Jaya High Court on July 6.

http://www.malaysia-today.net/index...s-mp-&catid=19:newscommentaries&Itemid=100131
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fm...-theft-and-cover-up-speaker-involved-says-mp-
 
Re: Jet Engines Jalan-Jalan...

'My son tortured into admitting jet engines theft'


By B Nantha Kumar

KUALA LUMPUR: The father of one of two men charged with the theft of two F5E fighter jet engines made a police report today claiming that his son was forced to make a false admission to the theft while under remand.

N Nagarajah, 71, the father of N Tharmendran, lodged the report at the Brickfields police station at 11am today, saying that his son was tortured into admitting to the theft.

He was accompanied by lawyers M Manoharan, Low Goh Bourne, N Surendran and, MP for Kapar S Manickavasagam.

Nagarajah, in report, said that based on what his son told him, he was beaten and tortured during the investigations into the theft held at Sungai Besi Air Base.

He claimed that one Major Azam and Major Ismail wanted Tharmendran to confess to not only to stealing the jet engines, but also other airplane spare parts and air force property.

Major Azam, said Nagarajah, ordered Tharmendran to strip down to his underwear and forced to sit under an air-conditioned room turned on to its full capacity.

Major Ismail, he claimed, forced Tharmendran to wear a crash helmet and hit him over the helmet with a golf club and a cricket bat numerous times.

"He was questioned repeatedly at odd hours of the night and not allowed to sleep," said Nagarajah.

The mental and physical was carried out from July 2nd to July 17th last year, according to the police report.

"Major Ismai also threatened to shoot my son and Rajandran Prasad (the other man charged with the theft).

"My son was kept in dark room. All the time, they kept asking him to confess to stealing the two fighter jet engines from the Sungai Besi TUDM base," he said.

Nagarajah from Seremban said he believed that his son is innocent and is being deliberately made a scapegoat to cover up for higher-ranking officials involved in the theft.

He based his views on the fact that Tharmendran worked as store keeper in Subang Air Base while theft occured at Sungai Besi. "This is very strange," said Nagarajah.

He also said his attempts to get in touch with army officers who were working together with his son was unsuccessful as they have all been transferred out.

Torture helmet with names of victims on it


Meanwhile Surendran, one of Tharmendran's lawyers, urged police to urgently look into the claims made by Nagarajah, and investigate both Major Ismail and Major Azam.

Surendran said his client related to him how Major Ismail had told Tharmendran that the crash helmet used on him had the names of all the persons he had tortured written on it.

"This is very serious and police should immediately investigate the two officers," said Surendran.

Manoharan, who also Teluk Intan MP, said the government should form a Royal Commission Inquiry to investigate the incident and also all officers who were involved in the case.

"The government must be transparent because it involves national security," said Manoharan.

Manickvasagam said the case as absurd. "How can two persons steal such two huge engines on their own?" he asked.

Tharmendran's family, said Manickvasagam, will be sending a memorandum to Bukit Aman next week. He also said he will raise matter at the current of Parliament.

Tharmendran and businessman Rajandran were both charged in the Sessions Court in January this year in relation to the stolen jet engines.

Tharmendran was charged with stealing and abetting in the crime while Rajandran faces a charge of handling stolen properties. Both were also charged with conspiring to steal the engines.

Tharmendran's and Rajandran's trial has been set for July 19 at the Petaling Jaya sessions court.

Watch video of the press conference:
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http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/fm...son-tortured-into-admitting-jet-engines-theft
 
Re: Jet Engines Jalan-Jalan...

Missing RMAF jet engine: Trial set for July 19


PETALING JAYA: The Sessions Court here today set July 19 for the trial of a sergeant of the Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) and a businessman who are charged with stealing and disposing off two F5E jet engines belonging to the RMAF.

Judge Aslam Zainuddin set aside five days for the trial after counsel Rakhbir Singh, who is representing Sgt N Tharmendran and counsel Parvinder Singh Doal for K Rajandran Prasad informed the court that they had received all the documents they needed from the prosecution.

Deputy Public Prosecutor Syed Faisal Syed Hamid also told the court that the prosecution would hand over copies of any other documents that comes into its possession before the trial date to the defence accordingly.

During re-mention of the case today, Rakhbir Singh also urged the court to lower bail for Tharmendran from RM150,000 to RM10,000 citing it was too high considering the accused was only a sergeant and also had an aged father to care for.

He also said that the bail amount did not commensurate the value of the engines, adding that based on Internet reports, their worth was not very high.

However, Syed Faisal objected, saying the value of the jet engines should not be seen from the monetary aspect per se but also from the aspects of national security.

Aslam denied the request.

On Jan 6, Tharmendran was charged under Section 380, read together with Section 109 of the Penal Code, with theft. He was charged with stealing the jet engines in December 2007 at the air movement section of the RMAF base in Subang near here.

He was also charged with conspiring in the theft of the two engines with senior serviceman Mohamad Shukri Mohamad Yusop at the material processing shed (Matra 1) of the RMAF base in Sungai Besi. He was arrested on Sept 1 last year.

Tharmendran faces up to 10 years in jail and a fine, if convicted.

Rajandran was charged with disposing off stolen properties (the two jet engines) under Section 414 of the Penal Code.

He is alleged to have committed the offence on April 30, 2008, at No 49, Jalan TS 6/6, Taman Industri Subang.

Both had pleaded not guilty and Aslam had ordered that they be tried jointly.

Syed Faizal was assisted by DPP Hamidi Mohd Nor.

- Bernama
 
Plus giving THAM MA SEK, unlimited withdrawing limits to the hard earned monies of the people of SINgapore!, now changing their charter, to hide behind legal jargon; should be charged for TREASON.

What is two jet engines, a couple of submarines & maybe the entire armoury! These acts will maimed people physically, if the weapons were to be used, but loosing people's BLOOD money, maimed them for life; for they will be getting lesser of their amount of money & longer period when they retire or never get to see them at all; with ever changing rules.

Which is worst? Alibaba & the 41 thieves or 'white rats', slowing eating away the siloes of stored grain, meant for exigency...

;)

Remember a movie made way back, ( not the remake) WILLARD, where the rat controlled a colony of rats, who does its bidding....

The same is for SINgapore....just substitute that to a colony of white rats ( plus some mixed breed) & their colonies of white mice....who are daily raiding the siloes of stored grains....

Furthermore you have white cannies assisting the rats & the mice....:mad:
 
Stolen jet engines: Duo claim trial to money-laundering charges


Published: Friday August 20, 2010 MYT 11:47:00 AM
Updated: Friday August 20, 2010 MYT 11:49:44 AM


Stolen jet engines: Duo claim trial to money-laundering charges

PETALING JAYA: Two men charged in connection with stolen jet engines claimed trial at three Sessions Courts here to multiple money-laundering charges. Former air force sergeant N. Tharmendran, 42 and company director K. Rajandran Prasad, 38, were calm when recording their pleas.


 
Tharmendran arrested by the RMAF again


Friday November 26, 2010


Tharmendran arrested by the RMAF again

SHAH ALAM: Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) sergeant N. Tharmen_dran, who is facing a charge of abetting in the theft of two F5 jet engines, has been re-arrested by the RMAF on grounds of absence from duty.

Five RMAF provost marshalls whisked him away from the car park of the court complex at noon yesterday after he had attended the hearing of an application to have the charge against him dropped.


The Defence Ministry’s corporate communications unit said in a statement that Tharmendran’s failure to report to work after posting bail on Sept 6 constituted an offence under the Armed Forces Act 1972. Tharmendran is still under the RMAF service, the statement said.

On Jan 6, Tharmendran, 42, claimed trial to a charge of abetting the theft of two F5 jet engines that belonged to the RMAF from the Material Processing Shed Matra 1, RMAF base in Sungai Besi, on April 30, 2008. He can be jailed up to 10 years and fined if convicted. — Bernama

 
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