Gulf News

Saudi Arabia to crackdown on corruption

ANTI-GRAFT WATCHDOG HANDLES 117 CASES OF BRIBERY AND FORGERY

- BY RAMADAN AL SHERBINI Correspond­ent

In one case, the two suspects used false data for obtaining 50 per cent of the financial support.

ASaudi anti-graft watchdog said it has investigat­ed 117 cases of financial and administra­tive corruption during the month of Ramadan as the country presses ahead with a tough clampdown on white-collar malpractic­es.

The watchdog, officially known as the Control and AntiCorrup­tion Authority (Nazaha) has revealed details of some such cases that range from bribery, forgery, influence peddling and administra­tive authority misuse.

One case involves two personnel at a security company, who took advantage of the government support for private sector businesses and employees impacted by the novel coronaviru­s bearing 60 per cent of Saudi workers’ salaries, the Saudi news agency SPA reported. The two suspects used false data by registerin­g a number of the company’s employees in the eligibilit­y system in return for obtaining 50 per cent of the financial support provided to each employee.

Third case

A second case is pertaining to an employee at the Tourism Ministry, who violated his job duties and received bribes in collusion with 13 others in return for helping award lease contracts for a number of hotels in the Red Sea city of Jeddah rented by the government to provide quarantine accommodat­ion for Saudi citizens returning from abroad, according to SPA.

A third case, which Nazaha disclosed, is about the involvemen­t of a lawyer, three administra­tors in public prosecutio­n and a security man in the General Directorat­e of Prisons in bribes through the lawyer, who had previously served as a prosecutio­n member and offered bribes to the two administra­tors in return for providing him with informatio­n and documents on some cases and directing defendants to hire him.

An official in Nazaha said that not all suspects are in custody. “Some people have been released because the incidents involving them do not constitute crimes that deserve apprehensi­on,” said Ahmad Al Hussain, the spokesman for the watchdog.

“Others have been released because their escape is not feared or because their release poses no harm to investigat­ions and the trial proceeding­s,” he told state television Al Ekhbariya.

Al Hussain said those to be found out to have involved in corruption will be referred to competent courts for trial. In recent years, Saudi Arabia has stepped up a crackdown on corruption.

 ?? SPA ?? A Saudi security man enforces a curfew in the holy city of Medinah. The country has stepped up crackdown on corruption.
SPA A Saudi security man enforces a curfew in the holy city of Medinah. The country has stepped up crackdown on corruption.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates