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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. Image Credit: AFP

Kuwait City: Former Kuwaiti premier Shaikh Nasser Mohammad Al Ahmad Al Sabah said on Tuesday he was ready to face a probe over alleged coup plot and corruption that rocked the state.

A senior member of the ruling family who left office in November 2011 after nearly six years in office, he and former parliament speaker Jasem Al Khorafi were accused in a lawsuit filed on Monday of major corruption and of plotting a coup.

“Shaikh Nasser is prepared to answer all the points stated in a lawsuit with complete transparency and clarity,” his lawyer Emad Al Saif said in a statement.

The suit was filed by Shaikh Ahmad Fahad Al Sabah, another senior ruling family member. The two shaikh’s are cousins and nephews of the ruler.

Shaikh Nasser, 74, resigned from office after massive street protests over corruption charges that 13 MPs had received millions of dollars in bribes.

Al Khorafi, a wealthy businessman who was speaker between 1999 and 2011, made no comment on Tuesday but categorically denied the allegations when the news first surfaced several months ago.

Prime Minister Shaikh Jaber Mubarak Al Sabah also filed a suit on Monday asking the attorney general to investigate “allegations of money laundering, abuse of public funds and [financial] dealing with Israel,” made by Shaikh Ahmad.

Shaikh Ahmad, a former energy and economy minister, claimed he has videotapes showing the two former senior officials plotting a coup and charged that they also stole tens of billions of dollars of public funds.

The government said in April the videotapes had been tampered with and were not authentic, but Shaikh Ahmad insists they are genuine.

The corruption allegations were also made by prominent opposition figures at a public rally last week.

Several opposition groups pressed demands on Tuesday for an international investigation into the issue and reiterated calls for the resignation of the government and dissolution of parliament.

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.