A parliamentarian sets a date for the end of the food security law: the budget will reveal its corruption
A parliamentarian sets a date for the end of the food security law: the budget will reveal its corruption
2022-11-03
Member of Parliament, Muhad Al-Zayadi, set the date for the end of the food security law funds, while stressing that the budget’s need for financial disclosure will show all the corruption files that occurred during this stage.
Al-Ziyadi said in an interview with “Information”, “The date of the end of the Food Security Law will be on December 6, 2022 to review all the funds allocated to it from the state treasury,” noting that “the announcement and planning procedures delayed a little bit from completing all the paragraphs of the law.”
He added, “Al-Sudani put his hand on these funds and will inform the House of Representatives in detail about the big financial issue, especially the Food Security Law.”
And the former member of the Parliamentary Finance Committee, Muhammad Al-Shabki, had accused the former Prime Minister, Mustafa Al-Kazemi, of working to waste Iraq’s money, indicating that he had wasted 700 billion dinars of emergency funds.
And the member of the House of Representatives, that “the Prime Minister began to identify the shortcomings and reveal the corrupt,” noting that “the budget needs a financial disclosure, and it is currently on its way to the House of Representatives, during which all corruption files will be known.”
Earlier, a member of the House of Representatives, Donia Abdul-Jabbar Al-Shammari, attributed the absence of appointments for certificates, firsts, and contracts whose paragraphs are listed in the Food Security Law to the lack of funding by the Ministry of Finance.
On 6/8/2022, the House of Representatives voted on the proposed law on emergency support for food security and development, while the Parliamentary Finance Committee indicated that the law included the allocation of 15,000 new contracts for bachelor graduates for three years, with a salary of 300,000 dinars, provided that these contracts are distributed among 15 governorates within Allocations for the development of the regions, but so far it is not known where the money of the law was spent.
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