Deputy Ali Hassan Khaleel confirmed after the conclusion of the Finance and Budget Committee session that "what is required from us, as is required from all oversight bodies, is to establish and define the mechanisms for forensic auditing to achieve its true goals, away from general rhetoric. We emphasized the necessity of completing this matter to uncover all details related to it."
He clarified that "there is now discussion about figures and issues related to certain administrations; the most important thing for us is for the agencies, ministries, and judiciary to assume their responsibilities in following up every detail related to this audit so that matters can be placed in their correct context. This can only be achieved if we complete the application of the law that we approved in the Parliament, which is forensic auditing concerning two issues: forensic auditing in the ministries that have caused a significant part of the gap present today in the financial report, especially regarding the electricity sector, which has placed this heavy burden on the treasury, and forensic auditing in its true sense is about identifying responsibilities by name, across all ministries and administrations without exception. The other point we want to focus on is, and today we heard and confirmed the figure that within less than two years, we have spent more than ten billion on subsidies."