Director of the Media Department and Spokesman for the Attorney General Mohamed Samir

Director of the Media Department and Spokesman for the Attorney General Mohamed Samir said that Head of Administrative Prosecution will hand over the anti-corruption report within days to President Abdel-Fattah Al-Sisi, stressing that the report will include statistical analysis digitally details of each government sector suffers from crises and irregularities, and addresses the reasons that led to the commission of corruption.

He added that the role of the prosecution is not limited to direct investigation of financial and administrative irregularities only, but extends its mission to identify the shortcomings and imbalances that led to the occurrence of such violations, and provide legal and practical solutions to remedy this imbalance.

He stressed that Administrative Prosecution is concerned about the war on corruption, describing it as more fierce than the fight against terrorism, pointing out that the political leadership (President) has the full will to purge the administrative body of the corrupt state.

He added that the results this year confirm our progress locally and externally in the transparency index by the low rate of violations, thanks to efforts to eliminate corruption in state institutions.

He added that President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi receives periodic reports on the corruption and irregularities that the administrative prosecution has identified and proposals to confront. He does not stop supporting the prosecution in the fight against corruption and he stands with all the judicial and supervisory bodies to eliminate it.

He clarified that Administrative Prosecution has prepared the annual statistical analysis issued by the Anti-Corruption Department, which monitors the administrative and financial irregularities in the administrative apparatus of the State last year.

He stressed that statistical analysis includes all the violations revealed by the administrative prosecution in the government sectors to identify them, including the sectors of health, localities, education, transport, and the effects, and a number of violations committed by public officials.