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[🇧🇩] Corruption Watch
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G Bangladesh Defense

Reconstituting the ACC

FE

Published :
Jul 04, 2026 00:43
Updated :
Jul 04, 2026 00:43

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In a move awaited since long, the incumbent BNP government reportedly formed a search committee to select key members of the new anti-graft body. Already four months have elapsed since the chairman and two commissioners of the seventh Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) reportedly resigned voluntarily. Ostensibly, their exit was to make way for the newly elected BNP government to select the state's oversight body to combat corruption in line with its political manifesto. But effective measures had been lacking for long under the incumbent government to fill the void created by the resignations, though the ACC Act 2004, requires that it should be done within 30 days of any vacancy.

But this long absence of the top ACC officials has created legal and administrative bottlenecks, preventing the graft-fighting body from approving new cases, initiating investigations, filing charge sheets, or issuing travel bans. Notably, under the ACC Act, critical actions like formally starting a criminal inquiry or freezing properties require direct approval from the commissioners. In consequence, without a commission in place, hundreds of pending case files are remaining in limbo. Foreign governments require formal criminal proceedings in Bangladesh before providing legal assistance to trace and repatriate siphoned-off funds. But the ACC with this void at the top is unable to approve Mutual Legal Assistance Requests (MLARs) thereby stymieing international asset recovery efforts.

The process of forming a search committee to appoint new commissioners has been too slow. Moreover, structural reform efforts have come to a standstill after parliament allowed the Anti-Corruption Commission (Amendment) Ordinance proclaimed by the interim government to lapse. Going into history, the anti-graft body has fallen into similar crises for the fourth time since its establishment in November 2004 by the then-BNP government of prime minister Khaleda Zia replacing the previous anti-graft body, styled, Bureau of Anti-Corruption (BAC). Since then six anti-corruption bodies came and went till the July 24 uprising (when the sixth commission stepped down on October 29, 2024). The commission also experienced a similar state of vacuum for about one and a half months until the constitution of the seventh ACC in December 2024.

The last (the 7th) ACC constituted under the Dr Yunus-led interim government moved, despite its limited mandate, fast to clean some of the rot left by the previous (now-defunct Awami League) government. It took sweeping action against some crony oligarchs, ghost corporate bodies and affiliates of then-ruling party who considered the state exchequer their personal property. Against this backdrop, it is deeply disconcerting that the anti-corruption watchdog has been experiencing such a state of paralysis for so long when there is no political vacuum in the country. Critiquing such crises in the process of creating a constitutional body to fight country's systemic corruption, independent anti-corruption watchdog groups like Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB) have noted that ACC activities have historically struggled to remain free from political influence, with past biases in investigating or withdrawing cases dampening public confidence and necessitating deep institutional overhauls. Unsurprisingly, the present government has meanwhile drawn a lot of flak from various concerned quarters for the laxity. Even the International Anti-Corruption Coordination Centre (IACC) reportedly expressed similar concerns to the government.

Now, the formation of a 5-member search committee chaired by a Supreme Court Appellate Division Justice to recommend qualified candidates as chairman and commissioners for the anti-graft body is, though belated, a commendable one. But it needs to accelerate its pace of work to complete the remaining tasks so the massive backlog of pending anti-graft cases could be duly addressed. According to the gazette notification to this effect, the search committee formed under Section 7 of the ACC Act, 2004, would recommend at least two candidates for each post of chairman and commissioner. The president would recommend the new chairman and commissioner from the list. Hopefully, through reconstitution of the ACC, the present government would thus fulfil one of its 31-point state-reform agenda.​
 

NBR warns taxpayers against fraud, extortion attempts
Staff Correspondent 05 July, 2026, 11:57

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A file photo shows the National Board of Revenue headquarters in the capital. | New Age photo

The National Board of Revenue has urged all taxpayers to remain vigilant against fraudsters attempting to extort money by falsely claiming that their files have been selected for audit.

In a press release issued on Sunday, the NBR said that it had recently observed that organised fraud groups were contacting taxpayers from various mobile phone numbers, claiming that their tax files had been selected for audit.

The fraudsters reportedly promise exemption from audit or threaten legal complications in an attempt to illegally collect money.

In this regard, the NBR asked taxpayers to pay special attention to certain issues.

The NBR said that no official or employee communicated with taxpayers regarding tax audits through personal mobile phone numbers or any unauthorised channels.

If a tax file is selected for audit, the taxpayer will be notified solely through an official written notice, it said.

The revenue agency also said that any outstanding tax or government fee must be paid only into the state treasury through the prescribed government payment system.

‘No tax official or any other individual is authorised to receive tax payments personally or through mobile financial services such as bKash, Rocket or Nagad, or through any personal bank account,’ it added.

The NBR said that taxpayers receiving any suspicious phone call, SMS or email related to tax audits were advised not to be misled.

Instead, it said, they should immediately contact the office of the relevant deputy tax commissioner to verify the authenticity of the communication.

Moreover, if anyone impersonating an NBR official demands money, taxpayers are requested to inform the nearest law enforcement agency immediately and preserve the caller’s phone number as evidence, the revenue authority added.

The NBR reiterated its commitment to providing transparent, hassle-free services to taxpayers and urged the public not to engage in any financial transactions with such fraudsters under any circumstances.​
 

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