[🇧🇩] Corruption Watch

Reply (Scroll)
Press space to scroll through posts
G Bangladesh Defense
[🇧🇩] Corruption Watch
335
10K
More threads by Saif


‘RAJUK, most corrupt entity in country’​

19 Mar 2024, 12:00 am

rajuk.jpg


Staff Reporter :

The Bangladesh Restaurant Owners Association (BROA) has asserted that the Rajdhani Unnayan Kartripakkha (RAJUK) is the most corrupt institution in the country.
Following the Baily Road fire incident, they alleged that RAJUK is extorting money from restaurants under the guise of a drive.

They also announced that all restaurants will remain closed on Wednesday (20 March) in protest against the ongoing crackdown on such eateries regarding safety measures.

Leaders of the association declared on Monday (18 March) during a press briefing at the Nasrul Hamid Auditorium of Dhaka Reporters Unity (DRU) in Segunbagicha that if necessary, all restaurants will be closed indefinitely in the future.

Imran Hasan, the general secretary of the association, alleged that there had been no pause in the arrest of workers and the crackdown on restaurants even during Ramadan, resulting in a decline in customer footfall, which was further worsened due to negative publicity.

“It is high time we should be allowed to reopen the closed restaurants so that restaurant workers can be paid their salaries, allowances, and bonuses before Eid,” he said.

Calling for an immediate halt to the “injustices” occurring in the restaurant sector, he said, “No benefit can be reaped from these arrests and restaurant closures if there is no proper guidance for crisis management in critical situations.”

He recommended providing SOPs for fire safety and suggested forming a high-level task force for a permanent solution.

He urged safeguarding investments and employment in the country’s restaurant sector, providing guidance for safe food supply, and promoting cooperation.

“Extend a helping hand. End this unnecessary drama during Ramadan. Business owners should not be blamed for the negligence on the part of regulatory bodies,” he added.

Insisting that the industry remains largely neglected, he said the sector can be managed effectively through proper accountability mechanisms if building owners, restaurant owners, and government institutions collaborate.

“This sector did not flourish overnight.

We obtain licenses/permits and regularly pay taxes to the government. Despite the sector’s significant contribution, the sector faces challenges while obtaining licenses and permits due to the complexities in procedures,” he said.

Earlier this month (5 March), BROA reported the closure of nearly 40 restaurants in the capital amid the ongoing crackdown.

According to data from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS), there are over 481,000 restaurants across the country, employing three million workers.

Nearly 200 million people are directly or indirectly dependent on this sector.

The restaurant industry in Bangladesh is valued at $3.79 billion, with investments totaling Tk2,00,000 crore.

On 29 February, 46 people were killed in a devastating fire at Green Cozy Cottage building on Bailey Road in the capital. Since then, the Dhaka Metropolitan Police has been conducting drives in various restaurants.

A total of 872 people have been arrested, and 20 cases have been filed so far during these drives. Disciplinary action was taken in 887 cases.

The administration sealed many restaurants due to allegations of insufficient fire safety measures and irregularities.​
 

TIB slams move to drop wealth statement obligation for govt employees, warns of more corruption​

FE ONLINE REPORT
Published :​
Mar 19, 2024 20:38
Updated :​
Mar 19, 2024 20:51


1710889752168.png


Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB) has strongly criticised the move to amend the Government Servants (Conduct) Rules-1979, which would repeal the obligation for government employees to submit wealth statements.

If the existing rules are amended to relax the obligation, it would exempt nearly 1.5 million employees from accountability, facilitating corruption, the TIB said in a statement on Tuesday, calling for the immediate cancellation of the amendment move.

The Ministry of Public Administration recently initiated amendments to the Government Servants (Conduct) Rules, 1979, aiming to repeal the obligation for government employees to submit asset statements.

Once the draft amendment by the Ministry of Law, Justice, and Parliamentary Affairs is scrutinised, it will be forwarded to the Committee on Administrative Development for further consideration.

Expressing grave concerns about this, Dr Iftekharuzzaman, executive director of TIB, said that it could embolden dishonest government officials into engaging in corruption.

The proposed amendment contradicts the government’s electoral promise and commitment to zero tolerance against corruption at the highest levels, he said.

Dr Iftekharuzzaman pointed out that initially the obligation was to submit asset statements annually, which was later relaxed to every five years due to government employees’ reluctance.

However, many government servants did not adhere to even this extended timeframe, he said.

The TIB executive director said that the absence of asset statement submissions could evidently lead to increased corruption among government employees, facilitate the accumulation of illicit wealth, exacerbate difficulties for citizens seeking government services, escalate illegal financial transactions, and ultimately undermine efforts to establish a well-governed system.​
 

Hallmark loan scam: MD Tanvir, wife among 9 get life imprisonment​

19 Mar 2024, 3:52 pm

halmark.jpg



NN Online Report: Saying that the highest penalty for embezzlement should be death sentence, a Dhaka court today (19 March) sentenced Hallmark Group Managing Director Tanvir Mahmud, his wife Jesmin Islam, and nine others to life imprisonment in one of the cases filed over the Tk3,500 crore Sonali Bank loan scam.

Tanvir and Jesmin, also the chairperson of Hallmark Group, were also fined Tk5 crore each.

Additionally, Sonali Bank’s former managing director Humayun Kabir and eight others have received various prison terms.

Dhaka Special Judge’s Court-1 Judge Abul Kashem passed the verdict today (19 March), ACC lawyer Mir Ahmed Ali Salam confirmed.

Among those sentenced to life imprisonment are also Tanvir’s brother Tushar Ahmed, who holds the position of chief executive officer, T and Brothers Director Taslim Hasan, Max Spinning Mills owner Mir Zakaria, Paragon Group Managing Director Saiful Islam Raja, Nakshi Knit managing directors Abdul Malek, Abdul Motin, and Taslim Hasan.

Eight other who were handed different terms in the same case are – Saval Hemayetpur’s Tantuljhora Union Parishad (UP) Chairman Md Jamal Uddin Sarkar, Sonali Bank Senior Executive Officer (Dhanmondi Branch) Meherunnesa Merry, Sonali Bank (head office) former general managers Nani Gopal Nath and Mir Mohidur Rahman, former managing director Humayun Kabir, Deputy Managing Director (DMD) Mainul Haque, Deputy General Manager (DGM) Safi Uddin, and AGM Md Kamrul Hossain Khan.

UP Chairman Jamal Uddin has been sentenced to five years in prison, while the others have received 10-year prison terms each.

Currently, Jamal Uddin and Altaf Hossain are out on bail. Saiful Islam, Abdul Matin, Humayun Kabir, Nani Gopal Nath, Taslim, Saiful Hasan, Meherunnesa, and Zakaria are still fugitives.

Meanwhile, Tanvir, Tushar, Jasmine, and the remaining eight accused are in custody.

Tanvir and Jasmine are accused of embezzling Tk16.5 crore after taking a loan of Tk525.62 crore in the name of a non-existent Max Spinning Mills.

They were accused of embezzling the money between 18 September 2011 and 30 April 2012 by opening fake LCs (Letters of Credit) in the name of 11 Hallmark Group companies to pay for imported goods.

On 4 October 2012, Nazmuchchadat, assistant director at the Anti-Corruption Commission Head Office, filed a case with Ramna Police Station for embezzling Tk135,44,9,484 from the Hotel Sheraton branch of Sonali Bank.

Tushar was arrested on 8 October 2012 in this case.

Following the investigation, on 7 October 2013, the investigating officer filed a charge sheet against the 17 accused in 11 cases. These 11 cases were transferred to Special Judge’s Court-1 in Dhaka for trial.

Later, on 17 February and 27 March 2016, the trial court framed charges against the accused.

business Following today’s verdict on one of those cases, the remaining cases are pending trial.
 

Capital flight covered up​


1711059939477.png


NRB Commercial (NRBC) Bank has often made headlines for alleged money laundering, loan irregularities, over-expenditure and recruitment anomalies. In 2017, Bangladesh Bank had to intervene to dissolve the bank's board and remove its managing director Dewan Mujibur Rahman over a loan scandal involving Tk 700 crore. The then chairman Farasath Ali had to resign from the board. Both Mujibur and Farasath were banned from bank directorship for two years by the BB, and the board was subsequently restructured. The new board is headed by a chairman against whom allegations of irregularities were already rife, and the bank continues to be dogged by anomalies. A six-month investigation by The Daily Star based on hundreds of pages of documents reveals numerous irregularities and even gun toting inside the bank.

The second installment of this four-part series tells the story of how the bank's Uttara branch sought to hide the trail of capital flight in the name of RMG export.

Export proceeds worth at least $3.45 million (Tk 34.41 crore) were not repatriated by six customers of NRB Commercial Bank's Uttara branch, and the bank concealed the trail of the capital flight, according to the bank's internal audit and case documents.

Additionally, five of these companies failed to make any exports at all against LCs worth $8.27 million (Tk 90 crore), leaving the bank grappling with dollars going out and none coming back in.
The amount was later turned into forced loans by the branch over the last four years, according to the bank's internal audit dated August 19, 2021.

Meeting minutes show that these forced loans were then converted into general loans to be rescheduled again and again, thereby covering up the tracks.

The companies, one of which is linked to Adnan Imam, the chairman of the bank's executive committee, collected bills against the orders without submitting shipping documents, while the money from exports never came.

"It has been observed quite a few times that the branch made payments of their back-to-back LC bills by creating Foreign Documentary Bills Purchase loan accounts, whereas these bills should have been settled through relevant export proceeds," says the audit report obtained by The Daily Star.

On July 11 last year, the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) sued 11 officials of the bank over swindling Tk 78.6 crore from the bank and laundering Tk 5.98 crore using a sweater factory called Ixora Apparels, one of the six companies accused of not repatriating export proceeds.

Asked about the overall condition of NRBC, Bangladesh Bank Executive Director and Spokesperson Md Mezbaul Haque said there have been multiple investigations into the bank and that actions are taken when required.

ADNAN'S LINK TO IXORA

Company registration documents show the company is linked to Adnan Imam, who along with current NRBC Chairman Tamal Parvez was previously investigated and removed from the bank's board over alleged money laundering through disguised loans.

Both have denied the money laundering claims, and said the allegations by "a vested group were false and motivated".

Adnan also denied having any link with Ixora.

According to the ACC investigation, Ixora Apparels exported 12 consignments of garments to the UK worth Tk 5.98 crore in 2018-2020, but did not remit the earnings.

The RMG maker is the 19th largest borrower of the bank, shows a memo from the bank's credit risk management division dated December 26, 2023.

The memo also shows that the company has had Tk 119 crore of its loans rescheduled till 2027 and 2028. But even after the regularisation, it has defaulted on instalments, with its overdue outstanding balance standing at about Tk 6 crore.

The company began banking with NRBC in August 2016.

"The central bank has done audit after audit on this bank but they do not follow through and there are no judicial outcomes."
— Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya​

When it took its first loan the same year, its owners were one Ruhul Amin Bhuiyan, who owned 40 percent of the share, and one Masud Rana who owned the same amount of the share. Their wives owned 10 percent each. Both Ruhul and Masud are accused in the ACC case.

In 2021, the company changed hands, giving 83 percent ownership to another company called Vibranium.

According to Vibranium's company registration documents, its chairman is Badrul Hasan Patwary. He is the company secretary of a firm called Genex Infosys whose chairman is Adnan Imam.

Vibranium was set up with a paid-up capital of only Tk 10 lakh. Less than two weeks after its incorporation in 2019, Vibranium proceeded to buy a company that owns 78,164 square feet of factory floor and over 800 pieces of capital machinery that produces over 8,000 pieces of clothing per day, according to the company's website.

NRBC renewed the company's composite loan limit at least eight times, thrice after Patwary assumed ownership.

"These are depositors' money and I am trying to recover it. I have to nurse these and recover the money anyhow. I take responsibility for these disguised (benami) loans and I will recover them."
— Tamal Parvez​

Patwary has not been charged by the ACC, although its investigation found that the client availed loan one after another but did not return the borrowed money.

"The loan was given even though the client's transactions were not satisfactory," said the ACC probe report.

In June 2023, Bangladesh Bank gave the company an extension up till September 2023 to adjust export proceeds worth $358,273 against the five orders from 2018 to 2020.

Adnan Imam refuted any relations with Ixora.

"Ixora Apparels is a client of NRBC Bank and in no way related to me. I was advised that Ixora went through financial struggles during the pandemic, like many other businesses at that time, and the bank has supported Ixora like any other normal business that required support. I am also advised that Tk 5.97 crore has been fully repatriated to Bangladesh. The ACC has investigated the matter and has found no issue," he said.

MISSING DOLLARS

Polygon Fashion Ltd is another company that failed to repatriate export proceeds worth $8,33,928 or Tk 9.15 crore, according to a 2021 report by the bank's Internal Control and Compliance Division (ICCD).

It also failed to make shipments, and could not settle LCs worth $3.27 million, which were opened to import raw materials for production.

In 2023, Polygon was the number one defaulting borrower of the bank. In November last year, its total outstanding loans stood at Tk 87.7 crore, and the bank had to file claims at the Money Loan Court (Artha Rin Adalat).

The bank's Uttara branch then turned the liability of the Gazipur-based company into 74 forced loans.

Polygon was over-financed although the company was likely incapable of availing such amounts of loan, the ICCD report said, adding, "As a result, the customer could not utilise funds properly and he had the opportunity to divert funds elsewhere and he may have diverted funds."

Before approving a loan, it is required by the bank to collect the customer's credit reports based on the value of the invoice. But during inspection, the audit team found that credit reports of some buyers were not available.

In addition, the team found that the bank did not collect all the original shipping documents as proof of shipments being made.

The ICCD report concluded that the liability has reached such a level that Polygon would not be able to pay it back. The loan was rescheduled in November 2021.

At the time of the ICCD report in 2021, Blessing Knitwear Ltd was the 20th largest borrower of the bank, having a loan of Tk 115.4 crore.

Its export proceeds worth $661,085 (Tk 7.2 crore) were not repatriated to the bank. It also failed to pay the bank an additional $2.33 million (Tk 25 crore) as it did not complete shipments against several other LCs.

"It has been observed that the branch allowed undue facility to the customer against incomplete documents without confirming shipping [sic] or having original authenticated bill of lading," the report said.

These unrepatriated proceeds were turned into forced loans, and the company may have diverted the fund elsewhere, the report noted.

On December 22, 2022, all of the liabilities were rescheduled into general loans.

Inside Knit Composite Ltd did not repatriate $301,191 or Tk 3.3 crore, again forcing the bank to turn the liability into forced loans, which the ICCD found "totally unexpected".

During the factory visit, the ICCD team did not see any stock of goods against the LC.

"It appears that the customer was free to open back-to-back LCs, and to sell those stock of goods on the local market at will," said the report.

In addition, the company did not complete other shipments, leaving the bank with an LC bill of $0.9 million (Tk 9.7 crore) and no incoming dollars.

Minutes of a meeting of the bank's credit risk division from December 24, 2023, show the bank rescheduled the forced loans to improve the bank's "ability to adopt new customers by reducing capital requirement of the bank" and its "market reputation".

5F Apparels did not repatriate $1.2 million (Tk 13.2 crore), said the report, adding that the bank allowed the customer loans against incomplete shipping documents.

The company also left the bank short of $0.7 million (Tk 7.6 crore) because it did not complete shipments.

"The branch negotiated without any shipping documents and original bill of lading, and consequently no shipment was executed against this bill," said the report.

While the bank converted the amount into forced loans, the company may have diverted the fund elsewhere, it said.

Minutes from the 129th board meeting held on November 20, 2021, show 24 forced loans worth Tk 12.23 crore were turned into general loans for a period of 10 years.

Relux Fashion Ltd did not repatriate $85,820 or Tk 94 lakh and the liability was turned into forced loans. In addition, incomplete shipments resulted in an unmet LC obligation of $0.8 million (Tk 9 crore) for the bank.

"Excess finance was allowed exceeding the value of export LCs violating export policy. Therefore, the export proceeds will be inadequate to settle back-to-back obligations," said the ICCD report.

However, NRBC Bank's board meeting minutes from April 12, 2023, show the forced loans were rescheduled for five years by converting them into general loans, wiping out the capital flight from record.

The Daily Star reached out to all these RMG companies via phone calls and emails. Only Polygon responded. Its Managing Director MD Shariful Islam said the company incurred forced loans as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.

"There were instances where the shipment was made, but the buyers refused to accept it. In another case, the buyer received the shipment but did not pay us. This resulted in forced loans," he said.

NRBC Chairman Tamal Parvez, also known as Parvez Tamal, said when he took over the bank in 2017, he had inherited a legacy of bad clients.

"These are depositors' money and I am trying to recover it. I have to nurse these and recover the money anyhow. I take responsibility for these disguised (benami) loans and I will recover them," he told The Daily Star in an interview for this story.

He said that when he took over, over half the loans that the bank had given out were unsecured overdraft loans – meaning there were no assets attached to them.

Dr Debapriya Bhattacharya, a Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue, said it shows that the bank's governance does not look after depositors' interest.

"It must be established whether these kinds of forced loans are within the prudential guidelines," he noted.

The economist also termed it "a failure in governance" on the part of the central bank.

"The central bank has done audit after audit on this bank but it does not follow through and there are no judicial outcomes," he said.​
 

Attachments

  • 1711059753782.png
    1711059753782.png
    387.8 KB · Views: 29

Gun in NRBC Bank boardroom​


1711060238659.png


NRB Commercial (NRBC) Bank has often made headlines for alleged money laundering, loan irregularities, over-expenditure and recruitment anomalies. In 2017, Bangladesh Bank had to intervene to dissolve the bank's board and remove its managing director Dewan Mujibur Rahman over a loan scandal involving Tk 700 crore. The then chairman Farasath Ali had to resign from the board. Both Mujibur and Farasath were banned from bank directorship for two years by the BB, and the board was subsequently restructured. The new board is headed by a chairman against whom allegations of irregularities were already rife, and the bank continues to be dogged by anomalies. A six-month investigation by The Daily Star based on hundreds of pages of documents reveals numerous irregularities and even gun toting inside the bank.

The first installment of this four-part series deals with alleged loan scandals and gun toting in the boardroom.



During the 40th board meeting of NRBC Bank on February 7, 2016, current Chairman Tamal Parvez and Director Adnan Imam entered the boardroom accompanied by a man carrying a large gun. Both Tamal and Adnan were board directors back then.

The gunman stayed in the boardroom until another director, Abu Bakr Chowdhury, asked him to leave, meeting minutes show.

Just at the previous board meeting, on December 20, 2015, Tamal, along with alternate director Abu Mohammad Saidur Rahman, allegedly assaulted the then board chairman Farashat Ali, the meeting minutes say.

At that point, the board was conducting an investigation into alleged money laundering from the bank amounting to Tk 64 crore and attempted money laundering worth Tk 165 crore by some of the board members.

1711060289115.png

Tamal Parvez entering the NRBC Bank boardroom to attend a board meeting accompanied by a gunman in 2016. Photo: Collected

The allegations involved three of their directors -- Tamal, Adnan, and Rafiqul Islam Mia Arzoo -- and sponsor shareholder AM Tushar Iqbal Rahman. There were 18 people on the board.

The board was also investigating alternate directors Saidur Rahman and AKM Mostafizur Rahman. Tushar is also Saidur Rahman's son.

Of these individuals, five currently serve on the board.

Over the last six months, The Daily Star has gone through hundreds of pages of the bank's meeting minutes, internal enquiry reports, bank statements and Supreme Court documents that reveal how these six, along with several others, formed an alliance to take fictitious loans in the name of companies tied to themselves or their friends and families, as well as for companies where they have business interests.

All six individuals named here have denied all the allegations, and said they were being framed as part of a conspiracy.

GUN TOTING

Displeased with the bank's investigation into the alleged scams, Tamal and Adnan brought the gun "to terrorise the board officials causing life threat," state the minutes of the 48th board meeting held on December 7, 2016.

"The purpose of violence and [brandishing] illegal heavy arms was to establish supremacy over the board to take and hide disguised/benami loans, disguised/benami contracts and other misdeeds of the accused directors and their associates," the minutes add.

Tamal denied all the allegations against him and defended bringing a gunman, saying the person was his licensed bodyguard.

Within two years of the gun-toting episode, Tamal was unanimously elected chairman of the bank's board on December 10, 2017, and has remained so since. At the same time, the board picked Rafiqul as the vice-chairman and Adnan as new chairman of the executive committee.

As per the 56th board meeting minutes, the findings by the internal enquiry committee against them were "resolved, set aside and cancelled" that year.

According to NRBC's website and Russian corporate registry, Tamal, originally from Barishal, was an expatriate having engagements in IT and real estate business and logistic consultancy in Russia.

Since his selection as the board chairman, Tamal's tenure has been peppered with allegations of disguised loans, illegal profiteering, violations of banking codes, and financial misappropriations, show the documents obtained by The Daily Star.
"The accusations made were false, concocted and distributed with an ulterior motive to defame me personally and to mislead the authorities."
— Adnan Imam​

For example, Lanta Services -- the same company that the previous board had investigated for allegedly being used by Tamal to take disguised loans -- was given credits worth crores of taka since he took the bank's helm.

Tamal is one of the founding sponsor directors of the bank established in 2013. In 2016, the bank's sponsor directors' capital was Tk 520 crore.

Of them, Tamal had a share capital worth Tk 20 crore, Tushar Tk 20 crore, Feroz Tk 20 crore, Rafikul Tk 20 crore and Adnan Tk 10 crore, according to meeting minutes.

1711060363341.png


His personal bodyguard escorts him to the boardroom. Photo: Collected

WHO TOOK WHAT?

In February 2016, the bank set up a committee and launched an investigation into a number of allegations, including the alleged money laundering by five directors and several others.

According to the 48th board meeting minutes, Tamal, Adnan, Rafiqul, Tushar, and Firoz took Tk 64 crore in disguised loans in the names of Pubali Construction, NES Trading, an NGO called Voluntary Organisation for Social Development (VOSD), Lanta Services and Ornita Agro. The loans were taken without the disclosure of the directors' affiliations with these companies.

In banking terms, these are called "related party loans", and according to Bangladesh Bank rules, in case of such loans, directors of borrower banks must declare their ties with the borrowing companies.

Of the Tk 64 crore, Adnan alone took two "disguised loans" of Tk 28 crore in the names of NES Trading (Tk 19 crore) and Pubali Construction (Tk 9 crore). He took another Tk 3 crore along with Mostafizur, Tushar and Firoz for a company called Ornita Agro, show the minutes of the 46th and 48th board meeting.

Ornita Agro was owned by Adnan and Mostafizur. After obtaining the Tk 3 crore loan from the NRBC, Ornita transferred an amount of Tk 3 crore to the bank account of IPE Capital in two tranches within two days, according to the bank's own enquiry report.

IPE Capital is Adnan Imam's family business where he is a director, their own stock exchange documents show.

NRBC's website lists Adnan as a UK citizen and a Commercially Important Person (CIP), having various businesses, including in real estate and private equity in London and Dhaka.

NES Trading is also owned by Adnan and his business partner and brother-in-law based in London, the bank's internal enquiry report said.

According to Adnan's own admission before the bank's enquiry committee, the owner of Pubali Construction is his employee, and that the Tk 9 crore loan for Pubali Construction was taken against the land of Adnan's father-in-law.

Tamal is also linked to Pubali Construction. He transferred at least Tk 87 lakh in two tranches to the account of Pubali Construction before the enquiry began, states the enquiry report.

On August 5, 2016, the then governor of Bangladesh Bank Fazle Kabir sent a letter to the then finance minister Abul Maal Abdul Muhith. The letter, obtained by The Daily Star, says that the BB had conducted a covert investigation and found that Adnan took disguised or "benami" loans worth Tk 3 crore using the name of Ornita Agro Industries.

Board members "observed with grave concern" that Rafikul, being the audit committee chairman, failed to prevent Adnan from swindling depositors' money, according to the minutes of 44th and 48th board meetings.

In a clear case of forgery, Adnan also submitted a bill of Tk 1 crore against the actual expenses of Tk 56 lakh for the interior work of the bank's Banani branch through his company, Adrita Trading, the 48th board meeting minutes recorded, citing board members.

VSDO, the NGO which was given Tk 30 crore loan, was founded by Mostafizur, a current director.

Tamal, the current chairman, took a disguised loan of Tk 3 crore in the name of Lanta Services, according to multiple meeting minutes.

The same day that Lanta was sanctioned the credit facility of Tk 3 crore, Tamal transferred Tk 1 crore to Lanta's account from his own, as lien, in the form of FDR.

Bank insiders say Tamal deposited the sum to facilitate the loan disbursement in favour of Lanta Services.

FROM BOARDROOM TO COURTROOM

Tamal, Adnan and Rafikul were removed from the board in April 2016 over these allegations, and the three took it to court.

A High Court bench led by Justice Md Rezaul Hasan reinstated them, but temporarily confiscated their shares and attached those to the bank. The court also said that they be kept out of board meetings that discussed the investigation against them.

The court made the decision to reinstate them only on the grounds that banking laws do not allow the board to relieve them. "However, this does not debar the bank or its board from taking proper action in accordance with the law."

The court ruled, "The petitioners [the accused directors] appear to have managed to slip through the fences [...] by contriving the path of taking disguised or benami loans."

The HC held that the board's enquiry report "shows the nexus of Adnan Imam with the loan of Pubali Construction and NES trading and his interest in these organisations."

It also said that there is prima facie proof of Tamal and Rafikul's link with Lanta, and there is a "seeable link of Tamal Parvez and his interest in Pubali Construction and NES Trading, and thus provide a basis that establishes on the preponderance of evidence that the petitioners had obtained disguised loans from the respondent bank and that they are the actual persons behind the veils of these two entities."


1711060407649.png

The gunman stands inside the boardroom with a firearm. Photo: Collected

LOVE FOR LANTA

Three years after these findings by the bank's board and the ruling by the High Court, NRBC gave Lanta Services loans worth Tk 14 crore, according to multiple meeting minutes.

At a meeting on February 19, 2019, the board led by Tamal allowed Lanta a composite credit facility of Tk 4.5 crore.

Meeting minutes show there was no discussion about the fact that Tamal was investigated for being related to Lanta, and that the High Court had instructed the bank to take action against him for taking disguised loans.

The loan limit for Lanta was increased by Tk 2 crore to Tk 6.5 crore within two months. On April 18, 2020, the credit line was further scaled up to Tk 9.5 crore. Three meetings later, Lanta got another Tk 50 lakh in a "stimulus loan". In 2021, Lanta's Tk 9.5 crore loan limit was renewed.

The company was also given three car loans worth Tk 4.28 crore in just two years, documents show.

Since Tamal became the board chairman, Lanta Services' subsidiary company Lanta Fortuna Properties bagged the interior design work of the bank on multiple occasions, including a Tk 87 lakh contract in June 2019.

Both companies have the same managing director, Faisal Bin Alam, a bank client.
"He [the gunman] simply escorted me to the boardroom…. I was under threat from the board and I had even sought protection from Rab through a written application."
— Tamal Parvez​

PILFERING PROVIDENT FUND


These two companies were also used for pilfering money from the provident fund of NRBC bank's junior tellers and assistant tellers, the junior most employees, show their bank statements.

The bank does not hire its contractual recruits itself. Instead, it uses a separate company called NRBC Management.

Founded in 2018, NRBC Management was owned by Tamal, Adnan, Rafikul and Mostafizur, among other people, until June 2022, documents show.

In a 2022 report by Bangladesh Bank's Financial Integrity & Customer Services Department, the central bank pointed out that obtaining third-party services from a company owned by the bank's management is a conflict of interest and a violation of the procurement policy.

Bank statements of NRBC Management's Provident Fund, Lanta Services, and NRBC Management show how the money went from the employees' provident fund to the NRBC Management's account, and then into Lanta Services', apparently using the recruitment company's bank account as a way to hide where the money was actually coming from.

There are many such transactions, but in one example, Tk 1 crore was transferred from the provident fund account to the account of NRBC Management on April 26, 2021. The same day, NRBC Management transferred Tk 60 lakh to Lanta Services.

This Tk 1 crore was returned by NRBC Management to the provident fund account nearly one and a half years later in October 2022.

But nowhere in the dozens of pages of bank statements in possession of this newspaper does it show Lanta returning the Tk 60 lakh it had taken from NRBC Management.

THE DENIAL

Tamal denied this, saying any bank statements in possession of The Daily Star are false or falsified.

In an interview at his Motijheel office, Tamal also defended bringing the gunman inside the boardroom, saying it was his licensed firearm and that the whole thing is being blown out of proportion.

"He [the gunman] simply escorted me to the boardroom…. I was under threat from the board and I had even sought protection from Rab through a written application," Tamal said.

However, during its proceedings, the High Court slammed Tamal for bringing the gunman, and said, "No personal gunman or personal bodyguard should be allowed to enter inside the bank."

Tamal also denied facilitating Lanta Services' loans.

"It is entirely possible that someone I personally know will have an account here. I was not the chairman of the bank when the overdraft facility was given, so I had no hand in who got the loans."

Adnan Imam denied having any business interest in Pubali Construction, Ornita Agro and NES Trading.

"The accusations made were false, concocted and distributed with an ulterior motive to defame me personally and to mislead the authorities," he said.

Both Tamal and Adnan said the HC judgement was based on false documents provided by vested quarters.

"The High Court in its judgement referred to the report prepared by the then chairman and his associates to frame me and other current directors of the bank. The reference in the judgement was neither a finding, nor an observation or obiter dictum, rather it was a direct reference to the so-called Comprehensive Enquiry Report. To put simply, the judge only read the allegations against me from the said false report made by the ex-chairman. It was not the judge's opinion," said Adnan.

But the HC verdict said it agreed with the findings of the NRBC bank's enquiry report because "no patent or latent irregularity or illegality or lack of competence has been found" in the entire proceedings of the probe committee.

When referred to the HC judgement, Tamal said, "The Appellate Division overturned the judgement…. This is a legal matter and whoever is in the chair can supply information according to his preference."

However, the Appellate Division did not overturn the HC Division verdict in full; it simply ruled that a portion of the HC judgement that took away his shares be set aside.

Mostafizur Rahman said that VOSD, the NGO he set up, is a non-profit and that the Tk 30 crore loan was taken in accordance with Bangladesh Bank's regulations.

These are "related party" loans, said Ahsan H Mansur, director of Policy Research Institute of Bangladesh.

"They needed to declare their relationships with the borrowing companies when such loans were sanctioned," the economist said.

Tushar Iqbal did not return our calls and text messages requesting his comment.

Saidur Rahman denied assaulting the former board chairman.

"They were pushing to sanction a loan for a company that did not have the credentials for it. Both Tamal and I demanded accountability on how our premiums were spent, and the chairman adjourned the meeting," he said.

Bangladesh Bank Executive Director and Spokesperson Md Mezbaul Haque said there have been multiple investigations into the NRBC and that actions are taken when required.

"We have not heard of any complaint about the chairman [Tamal] walking in with a gunman. If we had proof, we could have scrutinised the complaint," he said.​
 

Members Online

Latest Posts

Latest Posts

Back