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Govt publishes white paper on telecom sector
The task force formed in April last year prepared the white paper
Govt publishes white paper on telecom sector
The task force formed in April last year prepared the white paper
An AI-assisted infographic
The government today published a white paper on the telecommunications sector, outlining corruption, irregularities, administrative weaknesses, and structural problems over the past 15 years.
The white paper was prepared by a task force formed in April last year with the approval of the chief adviser to review and analyze allegations of corruption and misconduct within the posts and telecommunications ministry.
Following months of investigation and evaluation, the task force submitted the report in its final form, according to an official government statement.
The document noted that various activities of the Posts and Telecommunications Division during the last decade and a half were affected by systemic irregularities, misuse of authority, weak governance mechanisms, and institutional shortcomings.
It also includes a set of recommendations aimed at ensuring transparency, accountability, and good governance in the future.
The government hopes the findings and recommendations outlined in the white paper will serve as an important guideline for institutional reforms, strengthening anti‑corruption measures, and ensuring more efficient and citizen‑friendly services in the telecommunications sector, the statement added.
According to the white paper, Bangladesh's telecom sector is suffering from entrenched corruption, systemic irregularities, and a governance breakdown that has weakened regulatory credibility, distorted markets, and wasted public resources.
Prepared by a seven‑member committee headed by Professor Kamrul Hasan of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, the white paper also paints a bleak picture of a sector structurally misaligned, operationally compromised, and failing to deliver trusted, affordable connectivity.
It found that policy neglect, unchecked favoritism, politicized appointments, and procurement manipulation had accumulated over the years.
The document, based on a forensic review of 10 key entities under the PTD, exposes a systemic "governance capture" that has crippled regulatory authority, bled state‑owned enterprises, and defrauded the public.
From the highest regulatory body to project implementation cells, the sector operates on favoritism, bypasses competitive processes, and treats public resources as a vehicle for patronage.
"These structural deficiencies produce systemic risks to meritocracy, institutional credibility, service delivery, and long‑term sector reform."
At the heart of the crisis is the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), the agency tasked with regulating the sector.
The white paper found the BTRC itself to be a primary source of irregularity, with its credibility shattered by its own actions.
The commission was accused of "non‑competitive recruitment, misclassification of candidates, excessive age relaxations, improper absorption of project‑funded staff, re‑employment of retirees, and conflicted commissioner appointments."
By blurring the lines between regulator and employer, the BTRC created a self‑serving system.
"BTRC's practices have eroded institutional integrity and diminished the credibility of sector oversight," the report said.
The irregularities at the top set a precedent for the entire ecosystem.
The malaise spread through state‑owned enterprises like Bangladesh Telecommunications Company Limited and Teletalk, where boards became instruments of governance capture and politicized board‑level decision‑making.
The task force formed in April last year prepared the white paper
An AI-assisted infographic
The government today published a white paper on the telecommunications sector, outlining corruption, irregularities, administrative weaknesses, and structural problems over the past 15 years.
The white paper was prepared by a task force formed in April last year with the approval of the chief adviser to review and analyze allegations of corruption and misconduct within the posts and telecommunications ministry.
Following months of investigation and evaluation, the task force submitted the report in its final form, according to an official government statement.
The document noted that various activities of the Posts and Telecommunications Division during the last decade and a half were affected by systemic irregularities, misuse of authority, weak governance mechanisms, and institutional shortcomings.
It also includes a set of recommendations aimed at ensuring transparency, accountability, and good governance in the future.
The government hopes the findings and recommendations outlined in the white paper will serve as an important guideline for institutional reforms, strengthening anti‑corruption measures, and ensuring more efficient and citizen‑friendly services in the telecommunications sector, the statement added.
According to the white paper, Bangladesh's telecom sector is suffering from entrenched corruption, systemic irregularities, and a governance breakdown that has weakened regulatory credibility, distorted markets, and wasted public resources.
Prepared by a seven‑member committee headed by Professor Kamrul Hasan of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, the white paper also paints a bleak picture of a sector structurally misaligned, operationally compromised, and failing to deliver trusted, affordable connectivity.
It found that policy neglect, unchecked favoritism, politicized appointments, and procurement manipulation had accumulated over the years.
The document, based on a forensic review of 10 key entities under the PTD, exposes a systemic "governance capture" that has crippled regulatory authority, bled state‑owned enterprises, and defrauded the public.
From the highest regulatory body to project implementation cells, the sector operates on favoritism, bypasses competitive processes, and treats public resources as a vehicle for patronage.
"These structural deficiencies produce systemic risks to meritocracy, institutional credibility, service delivery, and long‑term sector reform."
At the heart of the crisis is the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC), the agency tasked with regulating the sector.
The white paper found the BTRC itself to be a primary source of irregularity, with its credibility shattered by its own actions.
The commission was accused of "non‑competitive recruitment, misclassification of candidates, excessive age relaxations, improper absorption of project‑funded staff, re‑employment of retirees, and conflicted commissioner appointments."
By blurring the lines between regulator and employer, the BTRC created a self‑serving system.
"BTRC's practices have eroded institutional integrity and diminished the credibility of sector oversight," the report said.
The irregularities at the top set a precedent for the entire ecosystem.
The malaise spread through state‑owned enterprises like Bangladesh Telecommunications Company Limited and Teletalk, where boards became instruments of governance capture and politicized board‑level decision‑making.
































