Tycoons linked to Hasina siphoned $17b from banks, BB chief tells FT
The Bangladesh Bank (BB) governor has accused tycoons linked to the former administration of Sheikh Hasina of collaborating with members of the country's military intelligence agency to siphon $17 billion from the banking sector during her rule.
In an interview with the Financial Times, BB Governor Ahsan H Mansur claimed that the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI) had facilitated forced takeovers of leading banks.
Mansur estimated that Tk 2 lakh crore, or $16.7 billion, was moved out of Bangladesh after these takeovers through methods such as loans issued to the new shareholders and inflated import invoices.
"This is the largest, most significant bank robbery by any international standard," he said.
"It hasn't happened on this scale anywhere else, and it was state-sponsored. This couldn't have occurred without intelligence officers pressuring [former bank CEOs]."
The governor specifically named Mohammed Saiful Alam, founder and chairman of the industrial conglomerate S Alam Group, and his associates, alleging they had "siphoned off" at least $10 billion from the banking system after taking control of banks with DGFI support.
"Every day, they were granting loans to themselves," Mansur noted in the interview.
Responding through a statement issued by law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan on behalf of Saiful Alam, the S Alam Group denied Mansur's allegations, calling them baseless, according to the FT.
"The interim government's coordinated campaign against the S Alam Group and several other prominent businesses in Bangladesh has disregarded even basic principles of due process," the statement read.
"This has already shaken investor confidence and contributed to the deterioration of law and order. Given the group's record and contributions, we find the governor's accusations surprising and unjustified."
The Inter Services Public Relations Directorate, which manages media inquiries for Bangladesh's armed forces, did not respond to requests for comment. The DGFI was also unavailable for comment, FT reported.
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