Sudan Fights Corruption by Freezing ‘Suspicious’ Bank Accounts

Wagdi Salih, a member of Sudan’s Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds. SUNA
Wagdi Salih, a member of Sudan’s Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds. SUNA
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Sudan Fights Corruption by Freezing ‘Suspicious’ Bank Accounts

Wagdi Salih, a member of Sudan’s Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds. SUNA
Wagdi Salih, a member of Sudan’s Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds. SUNA

Sudan’s Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds announced seizing several banking accounts dealing in billions of Sudanese pounds, trading on the parallel market, and involved in money laundering.

Social media users shared a circular issued to commercial banks operating in the country, ordering them to freeze 163 bank accounts mostly belonging to individuals from the ousted regime.

Frozen bank accounts belong to senior officials who served under Omar al-Bashir.

The circular, published by the Central Bank of Sudan, also covers accounts belonging to the officials’ relatives and children.

According to the circular, the central bank decided to seize the accounts based on a letter issued by the Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds.

The Committee enjoys far-reaching jurisdiction to dismantle the former regime, its institutions, and political and economic power centers. Apart from putting former regime symbols on trial, the Committee also retrieves funds amassed by corrupt individuals who were powerful under Bashir’s rule.

Additionally, the Committee is clearing state institutions from employees assigned to their posts simply because of their political allegiance to the former regime.

Wagdi Salih, a lawyer, and politician who sits on the 18-member body, has revealed that the Committee could seize 90 bank accounts that handled over 64 billion Sudanese pounds in transactions in a short time.

Salih noted that the bank accounts belonged to individuals who were not involved in a clear economic activity or businesses in a press conference.

However, these accounts have been tied to money laundering and currency exchange schemes. Some of the owners of these accounts have been arrested with procedures pending for other account holders residing abroad.

For his part, Salih denied that the goal of the Committee’s operation was to expose people’s accounts in banks and said that his Committee only pursues suspicious accounts and according to legal and constitutional references.



Prominent Member of Asaib Ahl al-Haq Survives Assassination Attempt in Southern Iraq

Asaib Ahl al-Haq member Ziad al-Oujaili. (Iraq’s 964 media)
Asaib Ahl al-Haq member Ziad al-Oujaili. (Iraq’s 964 media)
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Prominent Member of Asaib Ahl al-Haq Survives Assassination Attempt in Southern Iraq

Asaib Ahl al-Haq member Ziad al-Oujaili. (Iraq’s 964 media)
Asaib Ahl al-Haq member Ziad al-Oujaili. (Iraq’s 964 media)

A prominent member of the Asaib Ahl al-Haq survived on Sunday an assassination attempt in Iraq’s southern Dhi Qar governorate.

Ziad al-Oujaili told local media that assailants on a motorcycle tossed a bag containing an explosive under his vehicle.

He said he was only four meters away from the car when it went off.

He escaped unscathed and the car was destroyed.

Police are now investigating the incident, he added.

The Asaib Ahl al-Haq has risen to prominence in recent years, especially after the rise to power of the pro-Iran Shiite Coordination Framework of which it is a part of.

Just years ago it was a minor faction that only boasted one member at parliament. The faction was initially formed after it defected from the Sadrist movement of influential cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

Now, the Asaib Ahl al-Haq enjoys 15 MPs at parliament and it occupies important ministerial positions, including the post of minister of education, and public positions throughout central and southern Iraq.

Assassination attempts are usually tied to partisan disputes over the governance of provinces, rivalry over economic projects or disputes between clans.

Dhi Qar has been tense over the arrest of Coordination Framework member Ammar al-Rikabi on Wednesday on charges of running an online extortion network.