Iran General NewsIran bank chiefs ousted in $2.6 bln fraud fallout

Iran bank chiefs ousted in $2.6 bln fraud fallout

-

Reuters: A $2.6 billion financial fraud that has shaken the government of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad saw the heads of three of the country’s banks ousted on Tuesday as lawmakers threaten to impeach the economy minister.

By Robin Pomeroy

TEHRAN, Sept 27 (Reuters) – A $2.6 billion financial fraud that has shaken the government of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad saw the heads of three of the country’s banks ousted on Tuesday as lawmakers threaten to impeach the economy minister.

The biggest fraud in the 32-year history of the Islamic Republic could result in the death penalty for anyone found guilty of it and has become part of an increasingly ugly split in the conservative elite that runs Iran.

Ahmadinejad has rejected claims from his hardline rivals that the investment company at the centre of the scandal has links to his key aide, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, the focus of fierce criticism by conservative politicians and clerics.

But that has not satisfied members of parliament who have already threatened to impeach the president over other issues and critics who accuse him of being in the thrall of a “deviant current” of advisors seeking to undermine the authority of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

With the government seeking to assert its authority in the case, an ad hoc governmental committee has instructed the Central Bank of Iran to remove the head of the bank at the centre of the allegations, Bank Saderat, and of the smaller Bank Saman, the Economy Ministry said on its website.

The chief of state-owned Bank Melli, Iran’s biggest bank, handed his resignation to the Economy Ministry, the website said.

A spokesman for Bank Saderat — a large, partly privatised company — denied reports that the bank’s chief had lost his post, while Bank Melli and Bank Saman were not immediately available for comment.

ELECTION ISSUE

At least 19 people have been arrested so far for the alleged scam which the judiciary said involved the fraudulent opening of bank letters of credit by the Amir Mansour Aria investment group.

Hardline conservative newspaper Kayhan has said the mastermind behind the fraud had links with Ahmadinejad’s closest aide.

Mashaie, once talked about as a possible successor to Ahmadinejad whose time in office ends in 2013, has been accused of heading the “deviant current” which the president’s foes say intends to dilute Iran’s Islamic character and undermine the role of the clergy.

The financial scandal has erupted in the run-up to parliamentary elections in March and is set to become a central issue.

With Iran’s reformists sidelined after the government crushed huge demonstrations following Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election in 2009, the March vote will largely be fought between rival conservative factions.

Prosecutor General Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei has said culprits of the fraud may be executed.

“The perpetrator of the recent embezzlement will be hanged if proven beyond doubt to be ‘corrupt on Earth’,” he said, referring to a crime that carries the death penalty under Iran’s version of Sharia law.

Upping the pressure on Ahmadinejad, twenty members of Iran’s parliament have signed a petition to impeach Economy Minister Shamseddin Hosseini over the affair.

“People who have given 200,000 martyrs for this establishment do not expect to witness from it such a grand violation of its banking system that has aroused a public distrust of the system,” lawmaker Aziz Akbarian told the semi-official Fars news agency. (Additional reporting by Hossein Jaseb; Editing by Alexander Smith and Hans-Juergen Peters)

Latest news

700,000 Jobs Lost in Iran as A Result of War

While the fate of the war in the region remains uncertain, reports from Iran indicate a suffocating livelihood crisis...

Iran: How Pahlavi’s Name Stole the January 2026 Uprising

In the biting cold of mid-January 2026, the air in Tehran’s Vali-e-Asr Square was thick with the scent of...

Escalating Executions in Iran Put EU Policy Under Scrutiny

A conference held at the European Parliament in Brussels on April 22, 2026, brought renewed attention to the escalating...

U.S. Sanctions Tehran’s Drone and Missile Networks

As part of its ongoing maximum pressure policy, the United States imposed new sanctions targeting supply networks linked to...

How Do the Children of Iranian Regime Officials Manage Smuggled Wealth?

Sky News published a report on April 19 about the children of Iran's ruling elites, who are known as...

The Collapse of Livelihoods in Tehran; Housing Rent Has ‌Become a Nightmare

An examination of rental listings in Tehran’s Districts 4 and 5 shows that the average asking rates in April...

Must read

Iran foundry workers protest back wages

Iran Focus: Tehran, May 21 – Dozens of workers...

Poll: Iran, Iraq, China top US enemies

AP: China has replaced North Korea as one of...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you