KLIFD To Get Off The Ground Early Next Year
KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 13 (Bernama) -- The US$8 billion (RM25.07 billion)  Kuala Lumpur International Financial District (KLIFD), to be jointly  developed by 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) and Abu Dhabi's Mubadala  Development Corporation, will get off the ground early next year.
 
  "The master plan is close to completion, we are working closely with  City Hall to get the details ironed up," said its chief executive  officer Shahrol Azral Ibrahim Halmi.
 
  The project, which is aimed at strengthening the country's position in  the financial services sector, will be developed in phases on a 30.35ha  piece of land in the Imbi area fronting Jalan Tun Razak.
 
  "We want the development to be on an orderly basis and ensure that  there are marketing benefits," he told Bernama in an interview.
 
  Over the next six months, 1MDB will intensify talks with prospective  investors and developers, he said, without revealing details.
 
  The first phase would comprise a tower and several buildings, he added.
 
  The projects in KLIFD are aimed at attracting cutting-edge technology  along with promoting sustainable development via green technology, he  said.
 
  Such niche development requires huge investment and as a  government-owned organisation, 1MDB has the strength and flexibility to  execute it, he said.
 
  He praised the incentives given to IMDB in the 2012 Budget, saying they  came at the right time when work on the financial district was being  intensified.
 
  "We appreciate the government's commitment to KLIFD. It will ensure  that we have the right sort of tenants, such as international banks and  financial institutions," he said.
 
  The incentives include a 100 per cent income tax exemption for a period  of 10 years and stamp duty exemption on loan and service agreements for  KLIFD-status companies.
 
  Others include Industrial Building Allowance and Accelerated Capital  Allowance for KLIFD Marquee Status Companies, and 70 per cent income tax  exemption for a period of five years for property developers in KLIFD.
 
  He said the level of commitment within KLIFD, the government and its  officials is exemplary as "everybody has the same sense of urgency  (given the importance and impact of the project)."
 
  Such incentives would also attract developers to the development of  KLIFD, despite the huge investments needed, he said.
 
  Shahrol Azral, who graduated from Stanford University in the U.S. and  has  experienced the Silicon Valley lifestyle, said KLIFD would also  have a similar concept, being not just about offices but a place where  one can "hang-out" and network.
 
  "KLIFD is all about building the nucleus for talent and innovation,  which is also in line with the government's aim under the Economic  Transformation Programme," he said.
 
  1MDB takes a lot of effort to send the message across to the general  public of the totally new concept of KLIFD, he said.
 
  "We have a lot of programmes that involve the people and the younger  generation, such as Dana Belia," he said.
 
  Dana Belia, funded by Yayasan 1MDB, provides young people a platform to  express their hopes, ideas and creativity through projects that promote  unity.
 
  Shahrol Azral, who is also an expert in value creation in multiple  sectors, said he wants to maintain the "authenticity" of Malaysian  culture -- Malay, Chinese and Indian -- in KLIFD.
 
  "We have the diversity and that will be part and parcel of KLIFD, it  won't just be some building blocks but more than that," he said.
 
  -- BERNAMA
Source: http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v5/newsindex.php?id=619684



