Parliamentary Committee: $240 Bn Have Been Smuggled Outside Iraq since 2003

Iraqi men hold a banner during an anti-corruption demonstration at Tahrir Square in central Baghdad. (File photo: Reuters)
Iraqi men hold a banner during an anti-corruption demonstration at Tahrir Square in central Baghdad. (File photo: Reuters)
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Parliamentary Committee: $240 Bn Have Been Smuggled Outside Iraq since 2003

Iraqi men hold a banner during an anti-corruption demonstration at Tahrir Square in central Baghdad. (File photo: Reuters)
Iraqi men hold a banner during an anti-corruption demonstration at Tahrir Square in central Baghdad. (File photo: Reuters)

Iraq’s parliamentary integrity committee announced that about $240 billion have been smuggled outside the country since 2003.

Committee member Taha al-Difai indicated that the government formed an anti-corruption committee which came under political pressure, affecting its performance.

Difai told the state-owned Iraqi News Agency on Monday that he hopes the committee will be able to continue its work and investigate major cases such as corruption in ministries.

“Around IQD1,000 trillion ($685 billion) have been disbursed since 2003,” he said, adding that they include the budgets of the operational and investment ministries.

Difai pointed out that this amount was “wasted in contracting and rampant corruption,” noting that the committee concluded that the majority of projects in Baghdad or the provinces were assigned to incompetent companies.

The works were not completed and money was used for small projects rather than establishing strategic projects as main roads and highways, he indicated.

“The amount [$240 billion] was smuggled in the form of fake receipts and commissions were paid to officials,” pointed out Difai.

Earlier, Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi pledged that 2021 will be the year of uncovering major truths about corruption.

Kadhimi said the government is determined to fight corruption this year, despite the pressures from various figures and parties against the measures taken by the special anti-corruption committee.

Meanwhile, Masoud Haidar, an advisor to Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) leader Masoud Barzani, accused Shiite parties of stealing more than $1 trillion from Iraq.

Haidar indicated that Shiite parties do not have any plans to serve Iraq and are not capable of governing the state.

Over the past years, Baghdad and Erbil have been locked in a series of disputes, most recently the oil crisis in exchange for the salaries of the region's state employees, which remains unsolved since 2015.



Sudan’s Burhan Rules Out Peace Before Defeating RSF

Abdel Fattah al-Burhan greets his supporters in Omdurman, west of Khartoum, Sudan (File photo - AP)
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan greets his supporters in Omdurman, west of Khartoum, Sudan (File photo - AP)
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Sudan’s Burhan Rules Out Peace Before Defeating RSF

Abdel Fattah al-Burhan greets his supporters in Omdurman, west of Khartoum, Sudan (File photo - AP)
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan greets his supporters in Omdurman, west of Khartoum, Sudan (File photo - AP)

Sudan’s transitional Sovereign Council leader, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, has pledged to press on with the war until the entire country is “liberated,” and vowed to eradicate what he called “the militia, their agents, and collaborators.”

He accused “colonial powers” of supporting the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) with money, weapons, and mercenaries.

Speaking in Mauritania on Tuesday, Burhan said the fighting would not cease until “every inch desecrated by these criminals” is reclaimed.

He vowed to continue military operations until “all cities, villages, and rural areas in our beloved Sudan are freed,” according to a statement from the Sovereign Council’s media office.

Burhan said his country’s ties with domestic and foreign parties depend on their stance toward the ongoing war.

Burhan is on a tour of African nations, including Mali, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Senegal, and Mauritania. Observers say the trip aims to restore Sudan’s African Union membership, suspended after the October 2021 coup, and rally support against the RSF.

Speaking in Mauritania, Burhan vowed to defeat the RSF, accusing them of crimes under the leadership of Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, generally referred to as Hemedti, and called for unity to end his influence.

“Our message is on the battlefield, not through words, until these criminals are eliminated,” he said.

Burhan insisted peace is only possible if the RSF and their allies are removed. “We support peace, but only if these Janjaweed and their mercenaries no longer exist,” he stated.

He described the conflict as a “battle for dignity,” saying it is a fight to protect the honor and homes of Sudanese citizens.