A Scientific Workshop on the Role of Supervisory Authorities in Combating Financial and Administrative Corruption

A Scientific Workshop on the Role of Supervisory Authorities in Combating Financial and Administrative Corruption

Under the auspices of the Dean of the College of Education for Humanities, Professor Dr. Sabah Wajid Ali, the Continuing Education Department at the University, in cooperation with the Legal Affairs Division in the College, concluded its training course entitled “The Role of Supervisory Authorities in Combating Financial and Administrative Corruption (The Board of Financial Supervision as a Model)” on Thursday evening, March 7, 2024, at 1:00 PM in the Knowledge Hall of the College.
The workshop lasted for three consecutive days and was presented by Dr. Ali Sobhi Imran and legal consultant Ubayer Muhy Mustafa Al-Ta’ama. The course targeted the lecturers, employees, and students of the college.

The sections of the course were as follows:

The first day:The formations of the Board of Financial Supervision and the conditions for holding positions.
The second day: The tasks performed by the Board (federal financial supervision) and the goals it seeks to achieve.
The third day: The Federal Board of Financial Supervision Law No. 31 of 2011, as amended.

The course aimed to explain and define the Federal Board of Financial Supervision Law No. 31 of 2011, as amended, and its role in combating financial and administrative corruption within government departments.**

The course included:
An analytical study of the Financial Supervision Law No. 31 of 2011, as amended, and the role it played in combating financial and administrative corruption in government departments.
The outputs of this law and the results that resulted from its enactment in terms of combating corruption.

Recommendations of the course:

Clarifying to the target group that there is constant and continuous supervision, and the forms of this supervision may vary through individual assignments or joint committees that monitor cases of financial and administrative corruption in all state institutions.
Urging the target group to report cases of financial and administrative corruption in government departments promptly in order to create service institutions that are free from suspicion.