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PM DISCLOSES IN PARLIAMENT

$234b laundered during 2009-23

10 countries identified as destinations for siphoned-off money, MLAT deal being pursued for asset recovery


FE REPORT | April 02, 2026 00:00:00


Approximately US$234 billion was illicitly transferred out of Bangladesh during 2009-2023, Prime Minister Tarique Rahman told parliament Wednesday on a question about money laundering during the Awami League rule.

He quoted from the findings laid down by the White Paper Preparation Committee formed during the interim government's period.

Thus, an average of $16 billion (about Tk 1.8 trillion) siphoned off the country every year.

The Prime Minister, who became Member of Parliament for the first time, mentioned the data while responding to the question put up during his maiden PM's question hour in the 13th Jatiya Sangsad (JS).

The prime minister said his government is giving the highest priority to recovering assets smuggled abroad as a key part of its "broader strategy to combat corruption, money laundering, and financial crimes".

According to the head of government, legal proceedings are ongoing to recover laundered money in 11 cases identified and prioritised by an inter-agency taskforce. These cases involve 11 individuals and organisations, including family members and related entities linked to former prime minister Sheikh Hasina.

Those named include Sheikh Hasina, former land minister Saifuzzaman Chowdhury, S Alam Group, Beximco Group, Sikder Group, Bashundhara Group, Nassa Group, Orion Group, Nabil Group, HBM Iqbal, and Summit Group, along with their associated family members and affiliated entities.

Responding to a question from ruling-party MP Md Abul Kalam, the prime minister added that the government's election manifesto emphasised publishing a comprehensive white paper on corruption and money laundering during the previous "fascist Awami League era" and taking legal action against those identified.

Since the laundered funds are alleged to have been transferred to multiple countries, the government is strengthening information exchange, asset identification, and mutual legal assistance with relevant countries. To this end, it is working closely with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other agencies to conclude Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs).

The prime minister mentioned 10 countries initially identified as major destinations for illicit funds: the, United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Switzerland, Australia, Thailand, the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Malaysia, and Hong Kong. Among them, Malaysia, Hong Kong and the UAE have agreed to sign such agreements, while discussions with the remaining seven countries are ongoing.

He also presented updates on the 11 priority cases, noting that 11 joint investigation teams have been formed under the leadership of the Anti-Corruption Commission, with participation from the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), the National Board of Revenue's Central Intelligence Cell, and the Customs Intelligence and Investigation Directorate.

Tarique Rahman said as of 25 March 2026, courts had frozen assets worth Tk 704.46 billion, including Tk 571.68 billion domestically and Tk 132.78 billion abroad. A total of 141 cases have been filed, 15 of which have seen charge sheets submitted, and six cases have reached verdicts.

In response to a supplementary question from Jamaat-e-Islami MP Mujibur Rahman about repatriation of the laundered money, the prime minister said the current government being an elected one is committed to upholding the rule of law. He criticised past practices where individuals were allegedly coerced or forced into compliance.

He emphasised that the government would proceed strictly through legal means to ensure justice for all. "The law will take its own course," he said, adding that those who laundered public money would be punished under existing laws.

Responding to another question, he said: "In simple terms, this is people's money. Since we are elected by the people, we are accountable to them and to the country. Naturally, recovering this money and spending it for the benefit of the people is one of the government's key responsibilities."

To a question from NCP MP Akhtar Hossain regarding the financial impact of social-support schemes such as family card and farmer card, the prime minister said the budget allocation would be disclosed gradually and the programme would be implemented in phases, with the number of beneficiaries increasing on monthly basis.

He made it clear that the assistance is not being financed by printing money so it would not trigger inflation. Instead, the funds would be spent within the local economy, boosting economic activity, employment, and living standards for marginalised groups.

Regarding the family-card recipe, in response to a question from ruling-party MP ABM Mosharraf Hossain, the prime minister said it was launched on 10 March in 15 wards across select districts and corporations. Initially, 37,814 women-led households have received benefits, with an additional 30,000 families to be included within the current fiscal year. The annuity programme aims to cover 40 million families over the next four years.

He said issuing the card in the name of the female head of the household would ensure that support is spent on food, nutrition, healthcare, and education, while also increasing women's control over family resources and strengthening their role and dignity in decision-making within the family and society.

mirmostafiz@yahoo.com


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