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Nickdfresh
07-31-2007, 07:07 AM
"Untouchable" corruption in Iraq ministries
Report partially faults PM's office, says Health Ministry in 'grip' of militants
By Aram Roston and Lisa Myers
NBC News Investigative Unit
Updated: 8:56 p.m. ET July 30, 2007

Desperate shortages of drugs and medical supplies in Baghdad's overcrowded hospitals are confronting the victims of violence. But the shortages are not because of a lack of money.

Medicines and supplies have been siphoned off and sold elsewhere because of corruption in the Iraqi government's Ministry of Health, according to a draft U.S. government report obtained by NBC News.

The report, written by U.S. advisers to Iraq's anti-corruption agency, analyzes corruption in 12 ministries and finds devastating and grim problems: "Corruption protected by senior members of the Iraqi government," the report said, "remains untouchable."

One potential problem, according to the report, is in the office of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

The report said that "the prime minister’s office has on a number of occasions intervened on cases involving political supporters."

An al-Maliki adviser acknowledged to NBC that the problem of corruption in Iraq is "huge," but denied that al-Maliki's office has intervened in investigations. He said the prime minister is working hard to minimize the problem.

The draft report obtained by NBC News said the Iraqi Ministry of Health, which oversees the hospitals, is in the quote "grip" of the Mahdi Army, the anti-American militia run by Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

"Contract fraud and employee theft of medicines, food, vehicles are viewed by investigators as the greatest problems," the report said, added that "military sources have reported that the Mehdi Army [sic] finances operations from diverted medicines."

Corruption 'widespread'
In the Ministry of Oil — the most important agency for Iraq’s economy — the report said "corruption is a major problem" when it comes to refined oil products, such as gasoline and kerosene. The report said corruption in the oil ministry is partly to blame for lines of cars stretching for miles as Iraqis wait hours to fill up their tanks.

The report also said that an entire battalion of Iraqi police "was found to be nonexistent" and corruption in the army is "widespread," with ghost employees and a shortage of supplies.

The report cites alleged favoritism and selective prosecution.

The draft report cited an incident at the Ministry of Oil that implicated the Shiite minister and four other officials. One of the four was a Sunni. The rest were reportedly Shiites, who were "the only ones capable of giving testimony against the minister."

The minister, the report said, then used a technicality in Iraqi law to exempt the three Shiites from prosecution so that only the Sunni went to prison.

That technicality he allegedly used is a Saddam Hussein-era law known as Article 136B that was lifted when Americans first occupied the country. It was reinstated by the Iraqi government.

'Get out of jail free card'
The law allows the prime minister to exempt Cabinet ministers from prosecution and allows ministers to exempt their employees from prosecution.

"This is tantamount to a get out of jail free card," Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, told NBC. He pointed to the oil ministry case involving the three Shiites as a stark example of the problem. "It exposes the arbitrariness of Article 136B."

Bowen said the provision "essentially acts as a bulwark against effective enforcement. If a minister wants to protect an employee from corruption charges, simply by fiat that minister can do so."

The top Iraqi anti-corruption investigator, Judge Rahdi al Rahdi, said in an interview with NBC that "in many important cases, ministers did not give us the permission to take their employees to court, the prime minister's office did not give us permission to take ministers to court."

Rahdi said the total amount of missing money involved in his investigations into government misconduct is a staggering $11 billion.

Corruption is so serious, according to Ali Allawi, a former Iraqi government minister himself, that it is difficult for the government to function.

"There's a serious problem in the Ministry of Oil," Allawi said, "There's a serious problem in the Ministry of Health. There's a serious problem in the Ministry of Trade, and really, there's a serious problem in every government department."

Americans 'must grin and bear it'
Allawi, who has written a book called “The Occupation of Iraq: Winning the War, Losing the Peace,” said corruption has shattered any faith in government. "In some cases there is ... despair," he said, "that ... corruption has destroyed the ability of the government to provide services."

The draft report obtained by NBC News outlines some devastating cases in Iraq, like a "guns for cash scheme with the Mehdi Army" involving a candidate for the head of Iraqi intelligence.

On top of the troubles of the current oil minister, the report said a former acting minister of oil was indicted — a case blocked by high-ranking officials. In another case a former minister of transportation was indicted.

Last week Bowen issued a report finding the U.S. Embassy had not done enough to combat corruption.

Allawi argues, though, that there is not that much that U.S. officials can do, given the Iraqi officials they are dealing with. "The Americans who are supporting this political class, I believe really have no choice. This is a group they have been saddled with, or supported in power, and must grin and bear it," he said.

© 2007 MSNBC Interactive (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20043428/)

ODShowtime
07-31-2007, 07:18 AM
A bunch of scum bags, just like everywhere else.

Shading your cronies from investigation with an arbitrary law? Sounds familiar...

Nickdfresh
07-31-2007, 08:37 AM
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hideyoursheep
07-31-2007, 02:24 PM
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Nitro Express
07-31-2007, 02:53 PM
Too bad Saddam is dead. We could put him back in power and leave.

Baby's On Fire
08-01-2007, 09:14 PM
But what about all that yummy oil? And all those Haliburton bid-rigged contracts?

Without the illegal invasion, murder and occupation, you wouldn't have all those goodies......

Nitro Express
08-02-2007, 01:16 AM
Originally posted by Baby's On Fire
But what about all that yummy oil? And all those Haliburton bid-rigged contracts?

Without the illegal invasion, murder and occupation, you wouldn't have all those goodies......

Shit. They should just take the US Flag off our soldier's uniforms and put the Haliburton corporate logo on them and fly a Haliburton flag.

Nitro Express
08-02-2007, 01:17 AM
Storm Troopers in Darth Chenney's evil game.