HEADLINES

S’pore’s Jin Hian found responsible for nearly RM700 mil in losses

Judge said son of former prime minister should have realised shaky position of his company

9:18 PM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR – Goh Jin Hian, son of a former Singapore prime minister, is deemed responsible for US$146 million (RM695.7 million) in losses from when he was the director of a marine fuel supplying company.

Judge Aedit Abdullah found Jin Hian – who is the only son of Goh Chok Tong – in the course of his duties would have realised that the now-defunct company, Inter-Pacific Petroleum Pte, was being defrauded.

“The financial position of the company was suspect, and should have primed the defendant to look further and obtain a picture of the true state of the affairs of the company and monitor what was happening within it. That was his duty as a director.”

“Loss was caused to the plaintiff through the transactions and drawdowns which should not have been carried out and would not have been had the defendant performed his duties,” the judge was quoted as saying in his judgement.

The judge added “red flags” that should have triggered Goh’s inquiry into the company’s financials, such as the US$132 million owed to the company, suspended bunker licence, and owing US$15.6 million to Maybank.

In his defence, Jin Hian claimed that there was no breach or causation of loss, and the company qualifies for relief from liability under the Companies Act.

Jin Hian, 55, served as IPP director from 2011 to 2019. He was among four charged last year with false trading and market manipulation linked to investment holding company New Silkroutes Group Ltd. – February 7, 2024

Topics

 

Popular

[UPDATED] Welcome back to the Black Parade: My Chemical Romance set to rock Malaysia in 2026

Emo legends to play Bukit Jalil on April 30 as part of their long-awaited world tour, with Malaysian tickets ranging from RM299 to RM1,099 and sales opening on July 11, 2025

Over 23.6 million to benefit as new electricity tariff kicks in July 1

The Energy Commission has set a new average base tariff of 45.40 sen/kWh for RP4, slightly lower than before, bringing overall electricity costs down by up to 19% compared to the previous regulatory period

KLIA drivers urge MOT to intervene over new airport access charges

E-hailing and p-hailing groups say MAHB’s trial system causes delays and penalises drivers

Related