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Falah al-Hajraf, Kuwaiti lawyer of a senior member of the ruling family Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahad al-Ahmad Sabah, answers journalists' questions as he leaves a courthouse after filling a law suit over the alleged conspiracy and corruption on June 16,2014 in Kuwait City. Kuwait's premier and a senior royal filed two separate lawsuits to the attorney general on Monday demanding an investigation into allegations of a coup plot and a huge corruption case. AFP PHOTO / YASSER AL-ZAYYAT Image Credit: AFP

Kuwait City: Kuwait’s premier and a senior royal filed two separate lawsuits to the attorney general on Monday demanding an investigation into allegations of a coup plot and a huge corruption scandal.

The Gulf state was shaken two months ago after news surfaced about videotapes allegedly showing former senior officials plotting a coup against the government.

This was followed last week by allegations of massive corruption by ex-government officials.

Prime Minister Shaikh Jaber Mubarak Al Sabah sent a letter to the attorney general demanding an investigation into “allegations of money laundering, abuse of public funds and (financial) dealing with Israel,” made during a television interview, acting Justice Minister Shaikh Mohammad Abdullah Al Sabah told state news agency Kuna.

The accusations were made by Shaikh Ahmad Fahd Al Sabah, a senior member of the ruling family, on Saturday.

Shaikh Ahmad, a former energy and economy minister, said he has material evidence senior ex-officials plotted a coup and stole tens of billions of dollars of public funds.

He has filed a lawsuit over the alleged conspiracy and corruption and handed over the evidence he had collected, including videotapes showing the former officials conspiring, his lawyer Falah Al Hajraf said on Twitter on Monday.

The government said in April the videotapes had been tampered with and were not authentic. But Shaikh Ahmad said in the interview he had won a ruling from a Swiss arbitration authority which was later attested by the British Supreme Court that the videotapes were genuine.

Later on Monday, an opposition group of former parliamentarians labelled the allegations “the most serious corruption case in Kuwait’s modern history,” and called for an international probe in a statement.

They also called for the government to be sacked, parliament dissolved and snap elections held on the basis of the pre-December 2012 electoral law. They demanded all officials suspected in the case should be dismissed and held accountable.

The developments come after similar allegations made at a public rally last week by prominent opposition members that former high-ranking officials had stolen around $50 billion and deposited them in foreign banks, including in Israel.

The government said on Monday it plans to file a lawsuit against the opposition leaders for the allegations they made against current and former officials, saying the accusations were not backed by evidence.

The Audit Bureau, the country’s accounting watchdog, has been asked to launch a separate investigation into the allegations while the newly-established Kuwait Anti-Corruption Authority said on Monday it will start its work by investigating the case.

Following months of relative calm that came after years of political disputes, Opec member Kuwait was rocked by the two alleged scandals which threaten to plunge the emirate into a serious political crisis.

Kuwaiti opposition groups, which boycotted the last two election, in April called for democratic reforms, including a Western-style party system and an elected government to limit the powers of the emirate’s ruling Al Sabah family which has been in power for over 250 years.