exclusive He
is a complete unknown. Perhaps his parents want him to be someone
important - after all, his name ‘Kin Kwok’ means ‘nation-building’.
A
search on the Internet does not reveal much of this shadowy man. He was
a participant at a golf tournament for the elderly in Hong Kong,
suggesting that Shea Kin Kwok is a senior citizen.
Golf aside,
Shea is a businessman. He is a shareholder and director of two
companies registered in Hong Kong - Regent Star Company Limited and
Richfold Investment Limited.
Behind
that veneer of anonymity, Shea has indeed much to do with Malaysia,
specifically his ties to members of Sarawak Chief Minister Abdul Taib
Mahmud’s (photo) family and their business empire.
Shea’s
name first surfaced late March when Regent Star was implicated by the
Japanese media in a multi-million ringgit timber-shipment kickbacks
scandal.
It was reported that a Japanese shipping cartel of
the country’s top shipping companies paid at least RM32 million to
Regent Star to help “resolve” problems encountered in the exports of
timber from Sarawak to Japan.
Japan’s tax authorities had
considered these payments as ‘illegitimate expenses’ since Regent Star
- believed to be a paper company - did little ‘substantive work’. As a
result, the Japanese shipping companies were slapped with back taxes
along with heavy fines for ‘hiding’ the funds from the tax authorities.
A week later, malaysiakini broke the news on the alleged kickbacks in Malaysia, quoting Japanese media sources.
Shea
is one of two directors of Regent Star. The company was incorporated in
Hong Kong 24 years ago. Corporate information obtained from the Hong
Kong authorities indicated that Regent Star’s office is in Kowloon.
The
company has a paid-up capital of HK$10,000 (RM4,500). Regent Star’s
1985 annual return said its two pioneers directors were Shea Kin Kwok
and Kho Eng Beng. Both were appointed a week after the company was
formed, and each director held 5,000 shares.
Kho was listed as
a British national while Shea was a Hong Kong national. Kho resigned as
director in 2001 and was replaced by Ng York Kee, a Philippine
national.
In June - two months after the timber kickbacks
scandal broke - Regent Star made a surprise move. Ng, on behalf of the
company, applied to the Hong Kong Companies Registry for Regent Star to
be deregistered.
This came in the wake of Taib’s lawsuits against malaysiakini
and two opposition leaders for defamation over the alleged kickbacks
scandal. The two PRK state leaders had reprinted press reports on the
scandal from malaysiakini and Japanese media organisations for distribution to the Kuching public.
The PKR leaders have since, through their lawyer, written to the Hong Kong Companies Registry and Tax Office to query the deregistration of Regent Star.
Rise of Dewan Niaga Sarawak
The
Sarawak government under Taib, who was also forestry minister,
appointed Dewan Niaga (Sarawak) Sdn Bhd soon after he took power in
1981 as the local shipping agent for the exports of timber.
Dewan
Niaga Sarawak, incorporated in 1981 as a wholly Sarawak-based entity,
is the sole agent for timber shipments out of the state. Anyone who
wants to export timber has to go through them.

The company has an authorised capital of RM1 million with an issued
capital of RM200,000. Its directors are individuals closely linked to
the state government as well as Sarawak’s Associated Chinese Chamber of
Commerce and Industry.
Among them is ex-senator Wee Kok Tiong (photo), son of the late Sarawakian tycoon Wee Boon Ping.
Wee,
who was Bandar Kuching parliamentary candidate in the 2004 general
election, is from the predominately Chinese Sarawak United People’s
Party (SUPP) - a key Barisan Nasional component party in the state. He
lost to the DAP candidate in the contest.
Wee is also
president of the Associated Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry
and the vice-chairman of SUPP Kuching branch, as well as a member of
the party’s powerful Central Working Committee. He also owns
Sarawak-based Chinese-language daily, International Times.
Another
prominent director of Dewan Niaga Sarawak is Abdul Aziz Husain. Abdul
Aziz, one of the pioneer directors when the company was formed 26 years
ago, was Sarawak’s state secretary until 2006. He is also Taib’s
brother-in-law.
He has since been appointed group managing
director of the public-listed Sarawak Energy Bhd, which is majority
owned by the state government. Sarawak Energy is responsible for, among
others, the generation, transmission and distribution of electricity in
the state.
Two other family members of Taib are also directors
of Dewan Niaga Sarawak - younger brothers, Onn Mahmud and Mohd Tufail
Mahmud, were appointed in 1988 and 1991 respectively.
Sarawak’s first family
Dewan
Niaga Sarawak’s shareholders are Achi Jaya Transportation Sdn Bhd, with
104,000 shares, the Associated Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry
(80,000 shares) and Koperasi Koppes Bhd (16,000 shares).
The
majority shareholder, Achi Jaya Transportation, is the new name for CMS
Transportation Sdn Bhd. The company was established in 1983 and
described its business as ‘transportation and trading of goods and
services’. It has an authorised capital of RM3 million with an issued
capital of RM500,000.
Three of the five directors of Achi Jaya
Transportation are from the Mahmud family. They are brothers Onn, who
is the company’s pioneer director, Mohammad Tufail, who became director
two months after the registration of the company, and sister
Fredahanam, wife of former state secretary Abdul Aziz.
Another
director, Noor Zakri Abdul Ghani, shares the same registered
residential address as that of Onn. Noor Zakri is believed to be Onn’s
brother-in-law. The final director is one Chiew Chee Hung @ Chiew Chee
Ung.
In turn, Achi Jaya Transportation’s sole shareholder is
Achi Jaya Holdings Sdn Bhd, with 500,000 shares. Achi Jaya Holdings was
set up as Achi Corporation Sdn Bhd in 1983 to provide ‘management
services, property and investment holding and property letting’. It has
an authorised capital of RM2 million with an issued capital of RM1
million.
All five Achi Jaya Holdings directors are linked to
Sarawak’s first family. They comprise Onn, his wife Halimatun Abdul
Ghani, 23-year-old son Omar Yakub and 28-year-old daughter Siti Hajah
Hamidah, and Noor Zakri.
Onn and Halimatun were the pioneer
directors while their son became a director in January 2007. Onn and
his wife together own all the shares of Achi Jaya Holdings. Onn holds
499,999 shares while the wife has one share in the company.
This story would not be complete without mentioning CMSB, or Cahya Mata Sarawak Bhd.
Most
Sarawakians know CMSB, which is majority owned by Sarawak’s first
family. It is a public-listed company and its 2006 annual report put
its revenue at RM6.4 billion.
CMSB
is a conglomerate involved in manufacturing, construction, construction
materials, stockbroking and other financial services, property
development, insurance, and until recently, banking. However, its
banking business - the RHB Bank - was recently sold to the Employees
Provident Fund for RM2.25 billion.
Prominent among the board
of directors are two of Taib’s sons - Abu Bakir, 43, and younger
brother Sulaiman Abdul Rahman, 38. The elder son is CMSB deputy group
chairman and a non-executive director while the younger son is a
non-executive director.
Some of the key owners of CMSB are
Taib’s immediate family members - wife Laila (11.23%), daughters
Hanifah Hajar (13.85%) and Jamilah Hamidah (13.64%), and sons Sulaiman
(8.94%) and Abu Bakir (8.92%).
Altogether Taib’s family owns at least 56.58% of the company. His brother, Onn, also owns 0.76% in CMSB.
Given
its pedigree, CMSB secures some of plumpest contracts from the Sarawak
government. Moreover, it owns more than 2,234 ha of vacant land in
various locations in the state as well as offices, factories, quarries,
premix operations, shophouses and even a jetty.
Shea’s investments
Shea’s
business relationship with Onn dates back more than two decades. Shea’s
Regent Star is linked to another Hong Kong-registered company, Richfold
Investments, in which one of two directors is Onn.
A check by malaysiakini
with the Hong Kong Companies Registry revealed that Richfold
Investments was established on the same day as Regent Star - Nov 22,
1983. In addition, the two companies shared the same office in Hong
Kong.
Onn owns 49,999 shares of Richfold Investments while
Shea holds just one. Onn was appointed director of Richfold Investments
together with Shea just a day after Shea was appointed director of
Regent Star. (see Chart below)
Ng York Kee, another director of Regent Star, is also listed as Richfold Investments’s company secretary.
However,
Shea’s links to Taib’s family is not restricted to Hong Kong. According
to Bursa Malaysia, Shea was also a substantial shareholder of two
Sarawak-based companies.
From
the public-listed Sarawak Oil Palm Bhd (SOPB) annual reports of 2002 to
2005, Shea held shares in this well-connected company and was listed
under the ‘30 largest shareholders’ category.
His shares were 1,309,400 or 1.38% in 2002, 1,239,400 or 0.97% in
2003-2005. However, it the 2006 annual return, Shea disappeared as a
direct shareholder. It is not known if he had cashed out or moved his
share ownership to other companies.
Another of Shea’s
investments in Sarawak was CMSB, but this appeared shortlived. The CMSB
2001 annual report listed Shea as having 663,000 shares in the company.
Subsequent annual reports do not list Shea as a direct shareholder.
For a person who is a complete unknown in Sarawak, Shea certainly has a strong connection to the state.
Is he a proxy?
It
is also not clear how much the Japan’s shipping cartel had paid Regent
Star over the more than two decades of its existence. The Japanese
Taxation Bureau, whose probe is limited to seven years, estimated RM32
million was paid over that period.
This
will translate into Japanese consumers having paid millions of ringgit
extra for furniture and other timber products. And this could also
translate into large tracts of forests saved or much improved
livelihood for the native communities in Sarawak and Sabah who regarded
land and forests as their life and blood.
But was this money paid to a Hong Kong national called Shea or was he merely a proxy? If so, a proxy to whom?
And
just who is Shea? He doesn’t seem to play a significant role in Hong
Kong corporate world because a search with Hong Kong Companies Registry
does not show he has other business interests save for Regent Star and
Richfold Investments.
What can be established however is that
Shea is a business associate of Onn and that their association goes
back to 1983 - the same year Onn incorporated Archipelago Shipping to
be a shipping agent, the same year Dewan Niaga Sarawak executed the
shipping agreement with the Japanese shipping cartel for the shipment
of logs from Sarawak.
And 1983 is also the same year Dewan
Niaga Sarawak appointed Archipelago Shipping to be the sole handler of
shipments of all logs exported from Sarawak. What’s more, both Regent
Star and Richfold Investments were incorporated at the same time in
that year.
Clearly Shea is a person intrinsically linked to
the alleged timber kickbacks involving the Japanese shipping cartels
and Sarawak’s political elite. But this trail is about to turn cold as Regent Star could soon disappear should its application to close shop is approved by the Hong Kong Companies Registry.
