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Afghan bank employee suspected of stealing £700,000 fled to India

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Afghan bank employee suspected of stealing £700,000

Interpol red notice issued for woman believed to have travelled to India after allegedly transferring funds to relatives' accounts


Associated Press in Kabul
theguardian.com, Wednesday 4 September 2013 14.27 BST


Afghan police are trying to trace a bank worker suspected of transferring $1.1m (£700,000) from his employer to the accounts of relatives.

Shokofa Salehi, 22, worked in the money transfer division at the headquarters of Azizi Bank in Kabul. She disappeared around two months ago, said Azizi's chief executive, Inayatullah Fazli.

At least nine other people are believed to be involved in the case. "They are a mafia group," Fazli alleged.

The revelations are another blow to Afghanistan's banking sector, in which corruption has unravelled one major institution and many face security threats from militants and criminals.


An Interpol red notice – equivalent to an international arrest warrant – says authorities are seeking Salehi, who had worked at the bank for three years, on charges of fraud and misusing her authority. Afghan officials believe she used fake documents under the name Samira to travel to India after transferring the money. Her current whereabouts are unknown.

Two suspects in the case have been detained in Dubai. General Aminullah Amarkhail, a senior Afghan police official said counterparts in Dubai and India were assisting in the hunt for Salehi and the remaining suspects, one of whom is alleged to have invested $850,000 in several ventures in Dubai.

Amarkhail said Salehi's parents, who are among the missing suspects, were believed to have returned to Kabul after travelling with their daughter to India.

Azizi Bank, which launched in 2006, has more than 1,500 employees, 20% of them female, and claims to play "a quiet but effective role in women's emancipation and empowerment". It boasts on its website that it is "the bank you can trust".

Salehi's alleged theft is small fry compared with past Afghan banking scandals. In 2010 regulators seized Kabul Bank, the country's largest lender, amid allegations of severe corruption. The bank's subsequent bailout equated to more than 5% of Afghanistan's gross domestic product, making it one of the largest banking failures in the world in relative terms.

An independent report described Kabul Bank as being run like a Ponzi scheme. Investigators said $861m in fraudulent loans had disappeared into the pockets of associates of the men behind the bank.

Banks in Afghanistan have also been targeted by criminal gangs and suicide bombers drawn to gatherings of government employees drawing or cashing their paychecks.



Terrorist from India is on the run.

^^ Just a question though!! Which part it says that she is an Indian?? All I can see is she traveled to India after that incident with some fake documents.. Please correct me if I am wrongg!!

jaski2_20130905093555559553-620x349.jpg

An image provided by Interpol of Shokofa Salehi, who is the subject of an international arrest warrant..

Source
 
^^ Just a question though!! Which part it says that she is an Indian?? All I can see is she traveled to India after that incident with some fake documents.. Please correct me if I am wrongg!!
 


jaski2_20130905093555559553-620x349.jpg

An image provided by Interpol of Shokofa Salehi, who is the subject of an international arrest warrant..

Source


It was not an answer to the question.. Seems like any bad news linking India and Afghanistan, people like you have immediate orgasms..

Terrorist from India is on the run.

And also since when did committing fraud become a terrorist activity??
 
It was not an answer to the question.. Seems like any bad news linking India and Afghanistan, people like you have immediate orgasms..

And also since when did committing fraud become a terrorist activity??

It is still investigation, it come with under false document and fake names, we still don't know the fact. She probably travel to India along with their Indian passport. $1.1 million is huge crime for any activity from unstable war-torn Afghanistan. Interpol hopefully will chase her somewhere in India town.
 
It is still investigation, it come with under false document and fake names, we still don't know the fact. She probably travel to India along with their Indian passport. $1.1 million is huge crime for any activity from unstable war-torn Afghanistan. Interpol hopefully will chase her somewhere in India town.

Did you happen to read the link you provided us?? It says she is an Afghan national not Indian.. Get your facts straight before posting some nonsense..
@Aeronaut @Oscar @Awesome please change the misleading title..
 
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It is still investigation, it come with under false document and fake names, we still don't know the fact. She probably travel to India along with their Indian passport. $1.1 million is huge crime for any activity from unstable war-torn Afghanistan. Interpol hopefully will chase her somewhere in India town.

But she is not an Indian as you claimed .

If she is arrested from India , we will hand her over to Afghanistan .

Unlike some of our neighbours we don't nurture and provide shelter to criminals and terrorists from other countries .
 
@Jungibaaz .. kindly change the fake thread title, the news says an afgan bank employee fled to India.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
^^ Just a question though!! Which part it says that she is an Indian?? All I can see is she traveled to India after that incident with some fake documents.. Please correct me if I am wrongg!!

Could be a english comprehension problem with the OP....
 
I know you were searching anti India news with terms like "Indians are fraud", "Indians steal money" etc..

Then you found this article, it mentions India. So out of excitement, without reading it, you posted it.
:lol:
:omghaha:
 
Afghan bank employee suspected of stealing £700,000

Interpol red notice issued for woman believed to have travelled to India after allegedly transferring funds to relatives' accounts


Associated Press in Kabul
theguardian.com, Wednesday 4 September 2013 14.27 BST


Afghan police are trying to trace a bank worker suspected of transferring $1.1m (£700,000) from his employer to the accounts of relatives.

Shokofa Salehi, 22, worked in the money transfer division at the headquarters of Azizi Bank in Kabul. She disappeared around two months ago, said Azizi's chief executive, Inayatullah Fazli.

At least nine other people are believed to be involved in the case. "They are a mafia group," Fazli alleged.

The revelations are another blow to Afghanistan's banking sector, in which corruption has unravelled one major institution and many face security threats from militants and criminals.


An Interpol red notice – equivalent to an international arrest warrant – says authorities are seeking Salehi, who had worked at the bank for three years, on charges of fraud and misusing her authority. Afghan officials believe she used fake documents under the name Samira to travel to India after transferring the money. Her current whereabouts are unknown.

Two suspects in the case have been detained in Dubai. General Aminullah Amarkhail, a senior Afghan police official said counterparts in Dubai and India were assisting in the hunt for Salehi and the remaining suspects, one of whom is alleged to have invested $850,000 in several ventures in Dubai.

Amarkhail said Salehi's parents, who are among the missing suspects, were believed to have returned to Kabul after travelling with their daughter to India.

Azizi Bank, which launched in 2006, has more than 1,500 employees, 20% of them female, and claims to play "a quiet but effective role in women's emancipation and empowerment". It boasts on its website that it is "the bank you can trust".

Salehi's alleged theft is small fry compared with past Afghan banking scandals. In 2010 regulators seized Kabul Bank, the country's largest lender, amid allegations of severe corruption. The bank's subsequent bailout equated to more than 5% of Afghanistan's gross domestic product, making it one of the largest banking failures in the world in relative terms.

An independent report described Kabul Bank as being run like a Ponzi scheme. Investigators said $861m in fraudulent loans had disappeared into the pockets of associates of the men behind the bank.

Banks in Afghanistan have also been targeted by criminal gangs and suicide bombers drawn to gatherings of government employees drawing or cashing their paychecks.



Terrorist from India is on the run.



jaski2_20130905093555559553-620x349.jpg

An image provided by Interpol of Shokofa Salehi, who is the subject of an international arrest warrant..

Source
Oh man... poor guy.. just saw word India and decided to post this... poor guy...
 

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