• 11:43
  • Monday ,29 August 2016
العربية

Egyptian report recommends supply minister's prosecution on corruption

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09:08

Monday ,29 August 2016

Egyptian report recommends supply minister's prosecution on corruption

 A fact-finding parliamentary committee concluded in ‎a 78-page report on Sunday that outgoing supply minister‎ Khaled Hanafi and officials in the ‎ministries of agriculture, industry, and foreign trade ‎should be referred to prosecution for alleged rampant corruption and graft in the ‎wheat supply sector.

“Minister of supply Khaled Hanafi should be held responsible for all forms of corruption and ‎graft in the wheat procurement sector, including ‎supply, storage, mills and production of bread,” reads the parliamentary report.
 
Accordingly, the report recommended that “the minister of ‎supply and other senior officials should be referred ‎to prosecution authorities and the Illicit Gains ‎Apparatus should be investigated for corruption and ‎misuse of public funds and to determine whether they made huge ‎[illicit] profits from their influential posts.”‎
 
The parliament was set to discuss on Sunday nine interrogations that led to accusations of corruption, ‎graft and misuse of public funds against the minister of supply, though ‎Hanafi resigned ‎following a cabinet meeting on 25 August.
 
Hanafi said Thursday in ‎a press conference that the accusations against him ‎are “exaggerated” and that he decided to resign for ‎the sake of transparency and to allow prosecution ‎authorities question him.‎
 
MPs said they would use the report ‎prepared by the fact-finding parliamentary ‎committee to cross-examine Hanafi and recommend that he ‎should be referred to prosecution authorities. ‎
 
Magdi Malek, the head of the fact-finding committee ‎and an MP from the Upper Egypt governorate ‎of Minya, told reporters that the report, which is backed ‎by hundreds of documents on corruption in the ‎wheat sector, will be sent to prosecutor-general ‎Nabil Sadek and the Illicit Gains Apparatus to ‎investigate officials affiliated with different ‎ministries.
 
Sadek also indicated that the report recommends ‎that all citizens and low-ranking officials who ‎testified before the committee on corruption in the ‎wheat supply sector should be given special ‎protection in order to not face retribution.‎
 
The report is divided into seven parts that ‎cover all stages of wheat supply operations, with part four focusing on the ‎alleged "irregularities" surrounding the supply minister. ‎‎
 
“Minister Hanafi refrained from exercising tight ‎control on wheat supplies – which found their way onto the black market – or taking legal measures ‎against owners of bakeries who used ration cards to ‎obtain hundreds of tonnes of subsidised flour without ‎the knowledge of the card owners,” read ‎the report.
 
“The cost of these corrupt ‎practices reached EGP 11 million.”‎
 
The report also states that owners of wheat silos, ‎especially those on the Cairo-Alexandria desert road, paid ‎more than EGP 700,000 in bribes to a ‎number of supply ministry officials to look the other way on their corrupt practices.
 
The report also claimed that Hanafi exploited his ‎influential position as minister by allowing private ‎mills to obtain large quantities of wheat at the expense of ‎public mills.
 
The report will be ‎discussed in a plenary session on Monday.‎