Malaysia
Zahid wanted cheques converted to cash, said I’d get ‘blessings’, moneychanger Omar Ali tells court
Datuk Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi is pictured at Kuala Lumpur Court Complex July 14, 2020. u00e2u20acu201d Picture by Hari Anggarann

KUALA LUMPUR, July 27 — Omar Ali Abdullah, the money changer who allegedly laundered money on behalf of Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi told the High Court here today that the former deputy prime minister had asked him to help deposit welfare donations into the accounts of charity body Yayasan Akalbudi. 

Omar Ali, 48, said Ahmad Zahid also told him that all of the donors who will be contacting him in due course were from Yayasan Al Bukhari (YALB).

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"I had never asked (Ahmad Zahidi) why (it had to be done), and only complied with his directives. The accused told me that they (cash) were welfare contributions and if I helped him convert the cash into cheques, I would receive blessings as a result of my assistance,” he said.

He said this when reading his witness statement on the 26th day of the trial of Ahmad Zahid, who is facing 47 criminal breach of trust, corruption and money laundering charges involving funds belonging to Yayasan Akalbudi.

The 81st prosecution witness, who said he had no idea why he was chosen for the task, added further that Ahmad Zahid had also asked him to collect the cash from the donors and to convert them into cheques before depositing them into the accounts of Yayasan Akalbudi. 

Omar Ali, who has personally known Ahmad Zahid since his 20s, said several men from YALB would contact and then meet him at several locations, among them the ground floor of Fahrenheit Plaza and the lobbies of the Marriot and Grand Millennium hotels. 

"I received the first call from a man whom I did not know, who wanted to meet me at the ground floor of Fahrenheit Plaza and the man passed me a luggage bag filled with cash.

"There was no conversation, once I had the bag I drove straight home, where I counted the money inside (the bag),” he said, adding that the total amount came up to about half a million ringgit.

Omar Ali, the owner of money changers Marhaba Enterprise Sdn Bhd, said each time he received cash that way, he would immediately convert the cash into cheques before depositing the money into Yayasan Akalbudi’s accounts as instructed by Ahmad Zahidi.  

"Once I received money from this unidentified man, the accused would call me over the phone and asked me to convert the cash into cheques and then deposit them into Yayasan Akalbudi’s accounts.

"Normally, I would take between one and two weeks to do that. Once the cash has been converted into cheques, I will pass the bank slips to the accused at his house,” he said. 

Omar Ali said while he was at Ahmad Zahidi’s house circa early 2016 to pass the bank slips, the accused had instructed him to deposit the cheques into the accounts of Messrs Lewis & Co, a trustee of Yayasan Akalbudi.

"I did not ask him why they were deposited into Lewis & Co and not Yayasan Akalbudi.

"Later on, I was contacted by a man, whom I do not know as well, and I went to meet him before he passed on cash in a luggage bag to me, just like how it was before with the other man. I took the bag and went straight home,” he testified. 

For the 27th charge, Ahmad Zahid is accused of having committed money-laundering by instructing Omar Ali to convert for him a cash amount of RM6,885,300.20, which is income from illegal activities, into 30 cheques that were given to Messrs Lewis & Co for the opening of Maybank fixed deposit accounts.

Ahmad Zahid, 67, is facing 47 charges, with 12 of them involving criminal breach of trust, eight for corruption and 27 for money laundering involving tens of millions of ringgit of funds belonging to Yayasan Akalbudi.

The trial before Judge Collin Lawrence Sequerah continues tomorrow. — Bernama

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