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US report: the United Nations does not spare any Iraqi official from corruption.. And the absence of accounting began to "bother" her
616 policy 2022/11/16 21:47
Baghdad today-translation
An American report on Wednesday discussed the decision of Sudanese Prime Minister Mohammed Shia to form a high Committee to combat corruption,
while pointing out the futility of these committees, which will affect only mid-level officials, stressing that the
rates of corruption in Iraq began to "worry" the United Nations.
The report, which was reported by the magazine on the sixteenth of November this month and translated by (Baghdad today), said that
"the rates of corruption have become a concern for the United Nations,
especially after the scandal of stealing two and a half billion dollars of government tax funds in a corruption deal described as the deal of the century," as she described it. The magazine stressed that
"anti-corruption operations have so far been limited to mid-level officials in the state and have not targeted any leading figure or senior official," noting that
"it is very rare for a judicial verdict to be issued in Iraq against a person accused of corruption, regardless of the evidence against him". The magazine considered that
"the absence of any indictment or conviction of an Iraqi official in corruption cases aroused the interest of the international community," supplying statements to the UN envoy to Iraq during which she said,
"Frankly, no Iraqi official can claim to be free of corruption," referring to accusations against government officials in the Iraqi authority, according to the magazine.
US report: the United Nations does not spare any Iraqi official from corruption.. And the absence of accounting began to "bother" her
616 policy 2022/11/16 21:47
Baghdad today-translation
An American report on Wednesday discussed the decision of Sudanese Prime Minister Mohammed Shia to form a high Committee to combat corruption,
while pointing out the futility of these committees, which will affect only mid-level officials, stressing that the
rates of corruption in Iraq began to "worry" the United Nations.
The report, which was reported by the magazine on the sixteenth of November this month and translated by (Baghdad today), said that
"the rates of corruption have become a concern for the United Nations,
especially after the scandal of stealing two and a half billion dollars of government tax funds in a corruption deal described as the deal of the century," as she described it. The magazine stressed that
"anti-corruption operations have so far been limited to mid-level officials in the state and have not targeted any leading figure or senior official," noting that
"it is very rare for a judicial verdict to be issued in Iraq against a person accused of corruption, regardless of the evidence against him". The magazine considered that
"the absence of any indictment or conviction of an Iraqi official in corruption cases aroused the interest of the international community," supplying statements to the UN envoy to Iraq during which she said,
"Frankly, no Iraqi official can claim to be free of corruption," referring to accusations against government officials in the Iraqi authority, according to the magazine.