Malaysian politician
Datuk Seri Utama
Tengku Adnan bin Tengku Mansor
(
Jawi
: ???? ????? ?? ???? ?????; born 20 December 1950) is a
Malaysian
politician
who served as
Minister of Federal Territories
,
Minister of Tourism
and
Minister in the Prime Minister's Department
in the
Barisan Nasional
(BN) administration under former Prime Ministers
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi
and
Najib Razak
from November 2002 to the collapse of the BN administration in May 2018,
Member of Parliament
(MP) for
Putrajaya
from March 2004 to November 2022. He is a member of the
United Malays National Organisation
(UMNO), a component party of the BN coalition. He has served as the Treasurer-General of UMNO since June 2018. He also served as Secretary-General of UMNO from March 2009 to June 2018.
In 2018, he was charged with corruption for allegedly accepting bribe by a businessman, which he denied. In 2020, he was convicted and sentenced to jail. The conviction was overturned on appeal in 2021.
Early life and education
[
edit
]
Born in
Malacca
,
Malaysia
, Adnan obtained a Diploma in Business Administration from Mara Technology Institute (
Malay
:
Institut Teknologi Mara, ITM
), which is now known as
Universiti Teknologi MARA
(
Malay
:
Universiti Teknologi Mara, UiTM
), and a Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) from the
University of Southern California
.
Adnan held important positions in the corporate sector, such as Director and Chairman of Far East Asset (FEA) and Chairman of UNZA Holdings Bhd.
Political career
[
edit
]
Adnan joined politics in the early 1980s. He became Treasurer of the
UMNO
Youth wing in 1988. He was elected to the UMNO Supreme Council in 1993 but lost the position in 1996. He was appointed as Federal Territory liaison chairman in June 2000. On 29 November 2001, he was appointed the Chairman of the
Federal Territory
Barisan Nasional
. In 2003, he was appointed the Chief of the Putrajaya UMNO, and later he won the position again uncontested in the party election in June 2004. In September 2004, he was successful in a bid for an UMNO Supreme Council seat.
Adnan won the Parliamentary seat of
Putrajaya
in the
March 2004 general election
by defeating Abdul Rahman Othman of
Parti Keadilan Rakyat
(KeADILan).
Adnan was appointed the Tourism Minister, replacing Datuk Dr.
Leo Michael Toyad
, on 14 February 2006. He was dropped from the cabinet following the
March 2008 general election
, where the ruling
Barisan Nasional
coalition received a serious drubbing at the polls.
After his victory for third time in
2013 general election
, Adnan has returned to the cabinet and appointed Minister of the Federal Territories.
[1]
In the
2018 general election
, Adnan was reelected to the Parliament. However, he lost his cabinet post as BN was relegated to opposition while the federal government was taken over by
Pakatan Harapan
(PH).
Corruption case
[
edit
]
On 15 November 2018, Tengku Adnan pleaded not guilty for accepting RM2 million from Aset Kayamas director Chai Kin Kong via cheque deposited to Tadmansori Holding which Tengku Adnan had interests in. He was allowed bail of RM1 million.
[2]
On 2 July 2019, the trial began. 23 witnesses called including Chai and former
Kuala Lumpur City Hall
mayors, Ahmad Phesal Talib and Mohd Amin Nordin.
[2]
On 17 July 2019, Chai took out RM2 million receipt from his wallet which he said is evidence of payment by Umno, to show the sum is for political donation. “Yes, it is in my pocket now” ? he said when asked by lead counsel Tan Hock Chuan if he kept any such document.
[2]
On 14 October 2019, Tengku Adnan ordered by the High Court to enter his defence on the corruption charges against him.
[2]
On 17 January and 5 March 2020, Tengku Adnan’s defence proceedings were held for two days. He admitted receiving a RM2 million cheque from Chai for the expense of the Barisan Nasional election campaign on 14 June 2016. But, he did not report this to the party hierarchy as the money has nothing to do with Umno HQ.
[2]
On 30 June 2020, Tengku Adnan was the first defence witness and the defence closed its case after calling four witnesses.
[2]
On 21 December 2020, Judge Mohamed Zaini Mazlan said defence failed to challenge evidence brought by the prosecution. Tengku Adnan found guilty for receiving RM2 million of graft from Chai. He was sentenced to jail, fined RM2 million.
[2]
On 13 January 2021, Tengku Adnan was found guilty of a RM2 million graft charge towards the year-end, but was discharged on a charge involving RM1 million only a fortnight earlier.
[3]
On 25 January 2021, Tengku Adnan filed an appeal on 21 December last year against his conviction.
[4]
On 22 April 2021, the Court of Appeal is hearing an appeal by Tengku Adnan against his conviction for receiving RM2 million in kickbacks from Chai Kin Kong. Chai had testified that the funds were a political donation, but the High Court judge did not accept this. Tengku Adnan's counsel is arguing that the judge was wrong in not accepting Chai's testimony and that the receipt issued to the businessman for the funds shows that the payment was a political donation. The prosecution is arguing that the receipt was fabricated and that Chai was not impeached as a witness because he was recognised as biased towards Tengku Adnan. The court has adjourned to consider its decision.
[5]
On 22 April 2021, the judge overturned the conviction of Tengku Adnan on corruption charges. The original conviction was based on the testimony of Chai Kin Kong, who said that Adnan had received a RM2 million payment from him. However, the judge ruled that there was not enough evidence to prove that Adnan had actually received the money, and that the payment may have been for political donations instead.
[6]
Controversies and issues
[
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]
Lingam Videoclip controversy
[
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]
Adnan was called to testify in front of a
Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Lingam Video Clip
investigating the allegation of illegal intervention in the appointment process of Malaysian judges that allegedly occurred in 2002. The formation of the commission was a follow-up to a recommendation by a three-man panel which was tasked to determine the authenticity of a video clip of a telephone conversation that raised the allegation.
Following the findings of the Royal Commission, the
Malaysian cabinet
ordered the Attorney-General to immediately direct agencies to investigate the allegations levelled against six prominent individuals identified in the Lingam video clip affair. The six are former prime minister
Mahathir Mohamad
, retired chief justices Mohd
Eusoff Chin
and
Ahmad Fairuz Sheikh Abdul Halim
, former minister in the Prime Minister's Department Tengku Adnan Mansor, tycoon
Vincent Tan
and prominent lawyer V. K. Lingam.
There was sufficient cause to invoke the Sedition Act 1948, the Prevention of Corruption Act 1961, the Legal Profession Act 1976, the Official Secrets Act 1972 and the Penal Code against some of the principal individuals involved,
[7]
however as of recently, no action has been taken by the
Barisan Nasional
government against the individuals involved.
Female bloggers controversy
[
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]
Adnan was involved in controversy with regards to a statement he made about female bloggers where he was quoted as calling female bloggers liars. This caused an uproar among the blogger community and attracted a lot of negative reactions.
[8]
He was quoted as saying in Malaysian Chinese newspaper
Sin Chew Daily
and Singaporean English daily, the
Straits Times
:
[9]
[10]
...All bloggers are liars, they cheat people using all kinds of methods. From my understanding, out of 10,000 unemployed bloggers, 8,000 are women.
Federal territories expansion proposal
[
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]
In 2017 Tengku Adnan participated in a radio interview in which he discussed his plan to expand the federal territories to include Penang, Langkawi and parts of Malacca. he explained that his goal was to "ensure equal development in the northern state".
[11]
[12]
Tax evasion
[
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]
On 24 July 2019, the government had filed a lawsuit through the Inland Revenue Board (IRB), against Adnan to claim RM57.17 million in unpaid taxes since 2012 till 2017.
[13]
Title controversy
[
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]
Adnan claims that his title is not from Malaysia but hereditary from a line of Aceh warriors.
[14]
Personal life
[
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]
Adnan is married to Datin Seri Utama Enny Beatrice Ferlat Kusumo Anggraini. They have two sons and four daughters; Tengku Iqbal Munawir, Tengku Natasya Putri, Dr. Tengku Muhammad Hafiz, Tengku Nadira Munawarah, Tengku Najwa Munawarah and Tengku Nabila Putri. Adnan has two sons and two daughters from his previous marriage; Tengku Daud, Tengku Balqish, Tengku Yazir and Tengku Nadiah.
Election results
[
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]
Parliament of Malaysia
[15]
[16]
[17]
[18]
Year
|
Constituency
|
Candidate
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
Opponent(s)
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
Ballots cast
|
Majority
|
Turnout
|
2004
|
P125
Putrajaya
|
|
Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor
(
UMNO
)
|
4,086
|
87.64%
|
|
Abdul Rahman Othman (
PKR
)
|
540
|
11.58%
|
4,662
|
3,546
|
91.79%
|
2008
|
|
Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor
(
UMNO
)
|
4,038
|
74.56%
|
|
Mohamad Noor Mohamad (
PAS
)
|
1,304
|
24.08%
|
5,416
|
2,734
|
81.96%
|
2013
|
|
Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor
(
UMNO
)
|
9,943
|
69.09%
|
|
Husam Musa
(
PAS
)
|
4,402
|
30.59%
|
14,465
|
5,541
|
91.60%
|
2018
|
|
Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor
(
UMNO
)
|
12,148
|
49.47%
|
|
Samsu Adabi Mamat (
BERSATU
)
|
8,776
|
35.74%
|
24,881
|
3,372
|
91.12%
|
|
Zainal Abidin Kidam (
PAS
)
|
3,634
|
14.80%
|
2022
|
|
Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor
(
UMNO
)
|
13,692
|
37.37%
|
|
Mohd Radzi Md Jidin
(
BERSATU
)
|
16,002
|
43.67%
|
36,969
|
2,310
|
86.21%
|
|
Noraishah Mydin Abdul Aziz (
PKR
)
|
5,988
|
16.34%
|
|
Rosli Ramli (
PEJUANG
)
|
878
|
2.40%
|
|
Samsudin Mohamad Fauzi (
IND
)
|
63
|
0.17%
|
|
Lim Fic Bee (
IND
)
|
20
|
0.05
|
Honours
[
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]
See also
[
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]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Tengku Adnan returns to Cabinet after 5-year hiatus"
.
The Star
. 15 May 2013
. Retrieved
17 May
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
"Chronology of Tengku Adnan graft case"
.
- ^
Idris, Ahmad Naqib (13 January 2021).
"In The Dock: Ku Nan found guilty in one case but discharged in another"
.
The Edge Markets
. Retrieved
13 November
2022
.
- ^
"Ku Nan's appeal against graft conviction to be heard April 22"
.
Malay Mail
. 25 January 2021
. Retrieved
13 November
2022
.
- ^
Yatim, Hafiz (22 April 2021).
"RM2m 'political donation', receipt central issues in Ku Nan's graft case appeal"
.
The Edge Markets
. Retrieved
13 November
2022
.
- ^
Loheswar, R. (16 July 2021).
"Court of Appeal overturns Tengku Adnan's RM2m corruption conviction in split decision"
.
Malay Mail
. Retrieved
13 November
2022
.
- ^
"Royal Commission on Lingam video clip: Cabinet orders probe on Dr M, ex-CJs"
.
New Straits Times
. 16 May 2008. Archived from
the original
on 27 May 2008.
- ^
"A cyber war in Malaysian politics?"
.
The Malaysian Insider
. 19 February 2009. Archived from
the original
on 22 February 2009
. Retrieved
19 February
2009
.
- ^
"MALAYSIA: Bloggers see red over tourism chief's 'insults'
"
.
AsiaMedia UCLA (Reproducing article by Straits Times, Singapore)
. 13 March 2007. Archived from
the original
on 2 April 2008
. Retrieved
19 February
2009
.
- ^
Mariam Mokhtar (17 November 2018).
"The irony of Ku Nan's present situation"
.
Free Malaysia Today
. Retrieved
17 November
2018
.
- ^
"Ku Nan: Don't politicise proposal for federal territories to include Penang"
.
- ^
"No way, says LGE on Penang becoming a federal territory"
. 2 February 2017.
- ^
Hafiz Yatim (1 August 2019).
"Govt files RM57m suit against Ku Nan for unpaid excess taxes since 2012"
.
The Edge Markets
. Retrieved
8 August
2019
.
- ^
Kanyakumari, D. (14 March 2016).
"Title is hereditary, not from Malaysia, says Ku Nan"
.
The Star
.
Kuala Lumpur
.
Archived
from the original on 16 March 2016
. Retrieved
24 April
2023
.
- ^
"Keputusan Pilihan Raya Umum Parlimen/Dewan Undangan Negeri"
(in Malay).
Election Commission of Malaysia
. Retrieved
1 May
2010
.
- ^
"Malaysia General Election"
.
undiinfo Malaysian Election Data
.
Malaysiakini
. Retrieved
4 February
2018
.
Results only available from the
2004 election
.
- ^
"SEMAKAN KEPUTUSAN PILIHAN RAYA UMUM KE - 14"
(in Malay).
Election Commission of Malaysia
. Retrieved
17 May
2018
.
Percentage figures based on total turnout.
- ^
"The Star Online GE14"
.
The Star
. Retrieved
24 May
2018
.
Percentage figures based on total turnout.
- ^
"Pahang royalty heads state honours list"
.
www.thestar.com.my
.
The Star (Malaysia)
.