Iraq arrests politicians and government officials in anti-corruption crackdown


FILE PHOTO: Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi delivers a televised address after assuming office, in Baghdad, Iraq May 16, 2026. Iraqi Prime Minister Media Office/Handout via REUTERS

BAGHDAD, June 28 (Reuters) - Iraqi security ⁠forces arrested politicians, lawmakers and senior government officials early on Sunday in ⁠what security and legal sources described as the start of a broader ‌anti-corruption campaign ordered by Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi.

Elite Counter Terrorism Service (CTS) units raided the homes of politicians and senior officials inside Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone in the early hours of Sunday and ​made several arrests, the sources said, declining to be ⁠named because they are not authorised ⁠to speak to media on sensitive issues.

No official statement has been made about the ⁠arrests.

Zaidi, ‌who took office in May, has pledged to tackle entrenched corruption, one of Iraq's most persistent governance challenges despite repeated promises by successive governments ⁠to hold officials accountable.

Sunday's operation was launched on direct ​orders from Zaidi after ‌Iraqi judicial authorities issued arrest warrants as part of a crackdown on what ⁠the sources ​described as suspected corruption networks.

The latest raids followed the recent arrest of several senior officials, including a deputy oil minister, on corruption-related charges. Those arrests led to the issuance of additional ⁠arrest warrants that were executed on Sunday, the ​three sources said.

Most senior Iraqi government officials, lawmakers and political leaders maintain residences or offices inside Baghdad’s Green Zone, where parliament, foreign embassies and the prime minister’s office are ⁠situated.

A senior source quoted by state news agency INA said that some of the latest arrests were based on testimony provided by Adnan al-Jumaili, deputy oil minister for refining affairs, after his detention on corruption charges. The source told INA that ​al-Jumaili's statements implicated a wider network of officials in alleged ⁠corruption schemes.

Some suspects managed to flee before security forces reached them, prompting authorities to ​close entrances to the Green Zone and launch ‌a wider search operation, the three security and ​legal sources said, adding that the campaign is expected to continue over the coming days.

(Reported by Ahmed Rasheed and Muayad HameedEditing by David Goodman)

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