/ 20 September 2005

Former Iraqi minister wanted over $1bn fraud

Iraqi authorities are preparing an arrest warrant for the country’s former defence minister in connection with a massive fraud case involving the ”disappearance” of more than $1-billion from ministry coffers.

Judge Raid al-Radhi, who is head of Iraq’s Commission on Public Integrity, said on Monday that he gave Iraq’s central criminal court a dossier of evidence against Hazim Shaalan, who was minister of defence under the former government of Ayad Allawi.

”What Shaalan and his ministry were responsible for is possibly the largest robbery in the world. Our estimates begin at $1,3-billion and go up to $2,3-billion,” Judge Radhi, who is Iraq’s senior anti-corruption official, told Reuters.

The ”robbery” is believed to include the signing of multimillion-dollar deals with companies to supply equipment that was sometimes inappropriate for the new army or was years out of date. It is also alleged that the ministry paid huge premiums for some military hardware.

Judge Radhi said he expects the court to issue warrants over the next week to 10 days for Shaalan and for other senior defence ministry officials. The judge said he passed the file of evidence on the case to Iraqi authorities two months ago.

Shaalan, who is understood to be living in Jordan, has denied complicity in the scandal, saying that his actions as defence minister were ultimately the responsibility of the United States authorities in Iraq.

News of the warrant came after the Iraqi Finance Minister, Ali Allawi, claimed in an interview with the Independent newspaper that $1-billion had been stolen from the defence ministry.

Allawi said the rampant corruption and fraud at the defence ministry has left the new Iraqi army with second-rate weapons with which to confront the insurgency.

”Huge amounts of money have disappeared. In return, we got nothing but scraps of metal,” Allawi said.

Ayad Allawi’s government was in power from the end of June last year until late February this year. The new Prime Minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, has repeatedly complained about the legacy of administrative and financial corruption.

Judge Radhi said there is also evidence against the transport, trade, interior, public works and labour ministries, and that up to 50 officials could be brought to justice.

Allegations of corruption at the defence ministry have been swirling around Baghdad for some time, but the scale of the fraud has shocked many. A defence ministry source, who requested anonymity, told The Guardian on Monday that hundreds of millions of dollars were wasted on unnecessary and overpriced equipment for Iraq’s military.

”There appears to be no oversights and accountability in the procurement,” he said.

Investigators have been investigating weapons and equipment deals struck by the former procurement officer Ziad Cattan and other officials. The source said the most egregious case involved a $236-million contract last December to equip the Iraqi army with helicopters and other material.

”The money was paid upfront to a Polish company before we’d even seen what we were buying. It was very fishy,” he said. ”The helicopters turned out to be years old and not up to the job we required them to do in Iraq.”

Another contract for US machine guns, at a cost of $3 500 each, bought Egyptian copies worth $200.

Judge Radhi said the ministry is alleged to have illegally signed contracts with intermediaries, rather than with foreign companies and governments, for the supply of defence equipment. — Guardian Unlimited Â