Al Kasnazani is suspected of awarding contracts without tenders to firms linked to his brother
Baghdad: The Iraqi judiciary said Sunday it had issued an arrest warrant against Trade Minister Malas Abdul Karim Al Kasnazani on corruption charges.
“The central investigation court has issued an arrest warrant against the minister of trade and his brother on charges of financial corruption,” judiciary spokesman Abdul Sattar Bayraqdar said in a statement.
The pair’s case has been transferred to a specialised anti-corruption court in Baghdad, he said.
Government officials could not be immediately reached for comment. One of the minister’s advisers told AFP he was attending a cabinet session in Baghdad on Sunday.
The statement provided no details on the accusations against the minister and his brother.
But Iraqi media reports said Al Kasnazani is suspected of awarding contracts without tenders to firms linked to his Jordan-based brother Nehru, a wealthy businessman who once had presidential aspirations.
Their father, a Kurd who once ran a militia backed by former president Saddam Hussain to oppose peshmerga rebels, is the leader of the largest Sufi order in Iraq, the Al Kasnazani order.
Sufism, which focuses on the mystical dimension of Islam, is widespread in Iraq. Orders that transcend the Sunni-Shiite divide are organised around a grand master and meet to perform specific rituals, which can include music, dance and trance.
Malas and his two brothers - Nehru and Gandhi - were arrested in the late 1990s, allegedly for forging Saddam’s signature, but were released and fled to Kurdistan, an autonomous region of northern Iraq.
Their father is believed to have once had close ties with Ezzat Al Duri, who was Saddam’s number two and is also a Sufi.
The highest-ranking former regime figure still officially on the run, Al Duri and his loyalists were allied with Daesh in the early phase of the terrorist offensive in June 2014.
The Kasnazanis fell out with Saddam near the end of his reign and are reported to have played a key role in assisting the United States in planning the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Kasnazani is the highest-ranking official to be targeted by an arrest warrant since Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi promised a crackdown on graft in August.
The embattled premier, facing mounting popular discontent and large-scale protests, announced a number of measures aimed at curbing corruption and official privileges.
The trade minister is a political ally of Eyad Allawi, a politician who has been accused by the main Shiite bloc in government of abetting Islamist militant groups.
Allawi held one of the three vice-president jobs Al Abadi scrapped as part of his reform package but the former interim prime minister is challenging the decision.
Many of Al Abadi’s measures have yet to be implemented.