Corruption in Iraq: Financial Crisis Pushes Baghdad to Reopen Heavy Files

Summary: Iraqi economic expert Ziad al-Hashemi said Iraq’s current anti-corruption campaign is tied to financial pressure on the government, after years in which steady oil revenues allowed corruption to be politically managed. He said the present environment of regional tensions, disrupted oil exports, a nearly depleted treasury and heavy spending obligations left the government little choice but to recover stolen public funds, though he argued the effort remains insufficient if it targets only the “tools of corruption” and not their sponsors. Iraq’s Federal Integrity Commission said it has begun enforcing judicial arrest warrants against several suspects accused of violating public funds, in coordination with judicial, executive and legislative authorities, while the Iraqi News Agency said the campaign covered 47 suspects including lawmakers and officials. Sources said the Karkh Second Court summoned a first-tier political figure for testimony under routine legal procedure, and also addressed leaked raid images, saying some leaks were mistakes and some circulated images were not real. Former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki publicly supported the campaign, calling it a long-awaited step and urging it to continue, though his stance prompted reaction because of long-running accusations against him over corruption and public fund mismanagement. The campaign, which included raids in the Green Zone and arrests linked to investigations involving Adnan al-Jumaili, is described as one of the widest anti-corruption moves in recent years and a sensitive test for Iraq’s government and judiciary.

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What’s next?

The campaign places Iraq’s government before an early and sensitive test. If the measures remain confined to corruption tools and some executive fronts, they may end as a limited political pressure wave.

But if investigations expand toward the sponsors of corruption and the networks that provided political and administrative protection for years, the campaign could become a defining moment in the Iraqi state’s relationship with public money.

The key question now is whether the government and judiciary can carry the campaign through, or whether it will stop at the limits of the political balances that have long protected Iraq’s corruption system.