At a press conference in London, the Bruno Manser Funds offered DiCaprio an ultimatum: either he renounce his connections to the "politically exposed persons" at the center of the multi-billion dollar 1MDB Malaysian corruption scandal now being investigated by the US Justice Department and return corrupt money he allegedly received or resign from the position he was given by UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon in 2014, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
DiCaprio, 41, is alleged to have received millions of dollars diverted from the 1MDB sovereign wealth fund for his role as star and producer of "The Wolf of Wall Street", alleged by the DOJ to have been funded by stolen Malaysian money and produced by Red Granite, co-founded by Riza Aziz, the stepson of the Malaysian prime minister and a major figure in a DOJ filing.
At the press conference, entitled "Recovery of Stolen Malaysian Assets," a direct link was made between the 1MDB corruption scandal and major environmental issues in Malaysia, such as deforestation, one of the main concerns of the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation.
Clare Rewcastle Brown, whose online Sawarak Report has been investigating corruption in Malaysia for several years, said that one of 1MDB's first initiatives was to "pay off the chief minister of Sawarak," the Malaysian state on the vast island of Borneo where the 30-year rule of controversial governor Abdul Taib Mahmud has seen deforestation on a grand scale.
"We can't save the environment if we fail to stop corruption," said Straumann, who called DiCaprio's criticism of deforestation in the Indonesia-controlled parts of Borneo, "cynical hypocrisy."
"He needs to become part of the solution," he added. "But today he is part of the problem."
DiCaprio's representatives are yet to comment.
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