Switzerland has seized a painting by Vincent Van Gogh and two others by Claude Monet as part of the global investigation into Malaysia’s scandal-tainted sovereign wealth fund, an official said Friday.



The works were seized following a request from the United States, one of several countries probing alleged massive fraud at the Malaysian state fund 1MDB, said Swiss justice ministry spokeswoman Ingrid Reyser.

“The operation is over and we confiscated the three paintings,” Reyser told AFP in an email.

She declined to comment on where the paintings had been kept or the individuals involved.

Earlier this week, the US justice department filed lawsuits seeking to reclaim more than $1bn in assets linked to stolen or laundered 1MDB funds.

Artworks by Monet and Van Gogh were among the assets listed in the lawsuit filed at a California federal court.

The BBC reported that the artworks were identified as Vincent Van Gogh’s sketch La Maison de Vincent a Arles and Claude Monet’s Nympheas avec Reflets de Haute Herbe and Sainte-Georges Majeur.

Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak is facing mounting pressure over the scandal.

Authorities in the US, Switzerland and Singapore are investigating claims that the prime minister, his relatives and associates syphoned off enormous sums of public money.

The assets targeted for US seizure include royalties from the 2013 financial crime caper The Wolf of Wall Street starring Leonardo DiCaprio.

The film, directed by Martin Scorsese, was produced by a company owned by Najib’s stepson Riza Aziz, using more than $100m diverted from 1MDB, according to the US justice department.

Both Najib and 1MDB have consistently dismissed allegations of wrongdoing as political attacks by his opponents.