Malaysian billionaire politician 'laundered' millions in Australia Crime Michael West Continued Page 9 A billionaire politician under investigation for corruption in Malaysia faces allegations that his family companies have laundered millions of dollars through the Australian real-estate market.
The allegations against the family of Sarawak governor Abdul Taib Mahmud are contained in a report, obtained by Fairfax Media, by an anti-corruption organisation in Switzerland concerned with logging of rainforests in Borneo and displacement of indigenous people.
In its report, The Adelaide Hilton Case - how a Malaysian politician's family laundered $30million in South Australia, the Bruno Manser Fund (a Swiss non-government organisation) exposes the corporate connections behind Mr Taib's company Sitehost, which owns Adelaide's $50 million Hilton Hotel.
Major hotels chains such as Hilton normally manage and lend their name to properties owned by other parties. 
Mr Taib was a Colombo Plan graduate of University of Adelaide and a substantial benefactor to his old alma mater. He was given an honorary doctorate and had a part of the campus named after him.
The university has refused to say how much money it has received from Mr Taib, although a spokesman said no donations had been received in the past eight years.
The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission announcing in   June 2011 that the billionaire politician was under investigation for corruption.Under Mr Taib's governorship, nearly 90per cent of Sarawak's native rainforests have been logged.
Despite Mr Taib's modest income as a politician, his family has interests in more than 400 companies in 25 countries.
The report questions how the family could afford to finance the purchase of this major hotel and also a key loan in the deal, which together totalled about $30million in the early 1990s.
Mr Taib's daughter and son-in- law became shareholders of an Australian company, Sitehost, after the family bought shares worth $9.5million in 1993.
The report says that when Sitehost acquired the Hilton hotel the following year, it took an unsecured loan of $20.75million "from a non-bank lender whose identity remained undisclosed for more than 10 years".
Sitehost revealed in 2007 that the lender was Victorian company Golborne. The report tracks how that loan was then transferred to another company, Fordland, located in Queensland.
The last available financial accounts for Sitehost are from 2011 and show its main liability was a loan of $18.5million to Fordland.
The accounts describe a company with 361 employees, revenue of $1.3million and assets of $52million - primarily the Hilton.
According to the report, there is strong circumstantial evidence, including a shadow structure on the Isle of Man, that Golborne Australia and Fordland Australia represented the same beneficial owners: the Taib family.
Official records are lacking. As a large proprietary company, Sitehost is required to file annual financial statements with the Australian Securities and Malaysian billionaire politician 'laundered' millions in Australia From Page 7 Investments Commission (ASIC).
However, its latest annual accounts were filed in 2013 for the 2011 financial year.
There were no accounts filed from 1998 to 2006. Ernst & Young are the auditors and National Australia is the banker.
ASIC declined to say whether it had taken, or intended to take, any action on the breaches.
"We can't comment on the specifics of your query and any allegations about money laundering should be directed to AUSTRAC as it is Australia's anti-money laundering regulator," a spokesman said.
"ASIC is one of a number of agencies, including AUSTRAC, that forms the Serious Financial Crime Taskforce."
According to Sitehost's most recent filings, its directors are Jamilah Taib (Mr Taib's daughter), her Canadian husband Sean Murray - who lives in the second most expensive private residence in Ottawa - and two Australian lawyers, Gary Patrick Doherty and John Antoine Kiosoglous.
Contacted by Fairfax Media, Gary Doherty said he did not know the source of the funds behind Golborne or Fordland.
Mr Doherty is a partner at the Sydney law firm Low Doherty and Stratford and a director of property development companies, one of which bears the name "Conceal Pty Ltd".
Mr Doherty said there was "no subterfuge" in the company name Conceal.
"When you used to buy shelf companies, they were always running out of names. The name was just a word that was there," he said.
The other local director of Sitehost, John Kiosoglous, was unavailable for comment.
Mr Doherty said he was aware of the money laundering allegations but had no involvement in money laundering. Nor did he know the source of the funds from Golborne or Fordland.
There is no allegation either director has been involved in money laundering.
Besides the Taib family, with a 95per cent holding, the other shareholder in Sitehost is a Guernsey company, not a British Virgin Islands company as disclosed to ASIC.
"By indicating that Astar [this other shareholder with 5 per cent] is a Guernsey rather than a BVI company, Sitehost's official shareholder information is clearly misleading and probably likely in breach of ASIC regulations," the report says.
"This might be interpreted as an attempt to conceal the real ownership of Sitehost."
Bruno Manser is calling on Australian authorities to investigate the Taib family interests, as the fund has already done in Canada and Britain.
A representative, Lukas Straumann has scheduled a press conference for 9.30am on Wednesday at the Adelaide Hilton.
On Tuesday afternoon, South Australian MP Mark Parnell read out a motion in Parliament expressing concern at the destruction of Malaysian rainforests and the connections between the Taib family, the University of Adelaide and the Adelaide Hilton.
He called on the South Australian government to investigate the allegations. The motion is expected to be filed on Wednesday.
Investments Commission (ASIC).
However, its latest annual accounts were filed in 2013 for the 2011 financial year.
There were no accounts filed from 1998 to 2006. Ernst & Young are the auditors and National Australia is the banker.
ASIC declined to say whether it had taken, or intended to take, any action on the breaches.
"We can't comment on the specifics of your query and any allegations about money laundering should be directed to AUSTRAC as it is Australia's anti-money laundering regulator," a spokesman said.
"ASIC is one of a number of agencies, including AUSTRAC, that forms the Serious Financial Crime Taskforce."
According to Sitehost's most recent filings, its directors are Jamilah Taib (Mr Taib's daughter), her Canadian husband Sean Murray - who lives in the second most expensive private residence in Ottawa - and two Australian lawyers, Gary Patrick Doherty and John Antoine Kiosoglous.
Contacted by Fairfax Media, Gary Doherty said he did not know the source of the funds behind Golborne or Fordland.
Mr Doherty is a partner at the Sydney law firm Low Doherty and Stratford and a director of property development companies, one of which bears the name "Conceal Pty Ltd".
Mr Doherty said there was "no subterfuge" in the company name Conceal.
"When you used to buy shelf companies, they were always running out of names. The name was just a word that was there," he said.
The other local director of Sitehost, John Kiosoglous, was unavailable for comment.
Mr Doherty said he was aware of the money laundering allegations but had no involvement in money laundering. Nor did he know the source of the funds from Golborne or Fordland.
There is no allegation either director has been involved in money laundering.
Besides the Taib family, with a 95per cent holding, the other shareholder in Sitehost is a Guernsey company, not a British Virgin Islands company as disclosed to ASIC.
"By indicating that Astar [this other shareholder with 5 per cent] is a Guernsey rather than a BVI company, Sitehost's official shareholder information is clearly misleading and probably likely in breach of ASIC regulations," the report says.
"This might be interpreted as an attempt to conceal the real ownership of Sitehost."
Bruno Manser is calling on Australian authorities to investigate the Taib family interests, as the fund has already done in Canada and Britain.
A representative, Lukas Straumann has scheduled a press conference for 9.30am on Wednesday at the Adelaide Hilton.
On Tuesday afternoon, South Australian MP Mark Parnell read out a motion in Parliament expressing concern at the destruction of Malaysian rainforests and the connections between the Taib family, the University of Adelaide and the Adelaide Hilton.
He called on the South Australian government to investigate the allegations. The motion is expected to be filed on Wednesday.