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Bangladesh Corruption Report !

M.R.9

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Judicial System
Companies face a high risk of corruption in the Bangladeshi judicial system. Businesses report that irregular payments and bribes are frequently exchanged in order to obtain favourable court decisions (GCR 2015-2016). Prosecutors are susceptible to bribery as they have a low monthly income of 3,000 taka ($37.50) plus 200 taka ($2.50) per hour in court (HRR 2014). Besides corruption, the judicial systems suffers from a backlog of cases, political interference and weak institutional capacities (HRR 2014). Enforcing a contract is a big challenge for businesses as it is uncertain, takes an average of 1,442 days, and is extremely costly (ICS 2015; DB 2016). Only one in ten surveyed companies consider the court system to be a major constraint to doing business (ES 2013). For companies seeking to settle disputes for export-related transactions, the Bangladesh Export Promotion Bureau may offer facilitation (ICS 2015).

Police
There is a high risk of encountering corruption in the police due to low salaries, lack of training and expertise. The police force benefit from political patronage and a culture of impunity (NIS 2014). Businesses ranked the Bangladeshi police as one of the least reliable in the world and noted business costs due to crime and violence (GCR 2015-2016).

Public Services
There is a very high risk of corruption and bribery for companies when acquiring licenses and other public services in Bangladesh. Bangladesh is ranked among the countries where informal payments and bribes in connection with public utilities occur the most (GCR 2015-2016). Almost sixty percent of firms expect to give gifts or pay informal payments when obtaining operating licenses or public utilities such as a water connection (ES 2013). Facilitation payments given to public officials to get things done are very common (ES 2013). Regulations are often unclear or even conflicting and are insufficiently publicised (ICS 2015). Businesses should note that registration or regulatory processes are allegedly used as rent-seeking opportunities (ICS 2015). Starting a business costs the same as elsewhere in South Asia, but takes four days longer than the regional average (DB 2016).

Bangladesh is increasingly using information technology in order to enhance the transparency and efficiency of some government services, and has made some progress in developing independent agencies to regulate the energy and telecommunication sectors (ICS 2015). The Board of Investment (BOI) serves as a one-stop shop for companies seeking to invest in Bangladesh, but is criticised for fragmented authority. The BOI can register investors in industrial projects outside the Export Processing Zones and assist them with tax inquiries, land acquisition, utility hook-ups, and incorporation.

Land Administration
There is a high risk of corruption in the Bangladeshi land administration. Most firms expect to pay informal payments or give gifts when acquiring a construction permit (ES 2013). Companies should note that land is scarce and land registration is often prone to disputes due to competing titles, especially in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (ICS 2015, BTI 2014). While the right to own property is safeguarded by law, it is insufficiently enforced in practice (BTI 2014). Registering property takes an average of 244 days, compared to 98 in South Asia (DB 2016).

Bangladesh's most important construction scandals is the collapse of an eight-story garment factory in April 2013. The factory suffered from a faulty construction that violated building codes (CNN, June 2015). The incident highlights the larger issue of a lack of good governance, corruption, limited resources, bribes involved in licensing and permits or collusion between factory owners and safety inspections, which allows facilities to remain even when dangers are identified (TI, Apr. 2015).

Tax Administration
Companies face a high risk of corruption in the Bangladeshi tax administration. Bangladesh is ranked as the country where irregular payments in connection with tax payments is most common (GCR 2015-2016). Over forty percent of firms expect to give gifts in meetings with tax officials (ES 2013). A weak administrative infrastructure in the National Board of Revenue (NBR) makes for collusion and a discretionary space for granting benefits to targeted groups of taxpayers in both tax policy and administration (TI, Apr. 2015). It is common for businesses to negotiate their tax liabilities with the tax administration, whereby both parties enter into implicit agreements which involves regular informal payments (TI, Apr. 2015). This informal process is especially prevalent for small businesses due to their regular interaction with the tax collectors (TI, Apr. 2015). Accounting and audit firms are passively involved as they nominally verify tax declarations (TI, Apr. 2015). Businesses spend 302 hours per year on preparing, filing and paying taxes (DB 2016).

Customs Administration
There is a high risk of corruption at the Bangladeshi border when importing and exporting, and irregular payments are common (GETR 2014; GCR 2015-2016). Seventy-seven percent of firms expect to give gifts when obtaining an import license (ES 2013).

Public Procurement
There is a high risk of corruption in Bangladeshi public procurement. Nepotism, fraud and bribery in the awarding of contracts are especially common (TI, Apr. 2015). Almost half of companies expect to make irregular payments and give gifts in order to secure a government contract (ES 2013). Public funds are frequently diverted and favouritism often influences the decisions of government officials (GCR 2015-2016). Although inconsistently enforced, public procurement is regulated by the Public Procurement Act and subsequent regulations such as the Public Procurement Rules (TI, Apr. 2015). Foreign investors can generally participate in procurement under equal conditions (ICS 2015).

Legislation
The Code of Criminal Procedure, the Prevention of Corruption Act, the Penal Code and the Money Laundering Prevention Act criminalise attempted corruption, extortion, active and passive bribery, bribery of foreign public officials, money laundering, and using public resources or confidential state information for private gain. Enforcement of anti-corruption legislation in Bangladesh is very weak (BTI 2014). The Money Laundering Prevention Act provides for corporate liability, which allows for both individuals and companies to be held liable for bribery (U4, Nov. 2012). Business-to-business corruption is covered by the Money Laundering Prevention Act (U4, Nov. 2012). Facilitation payments can be construed as an unlawful gratification and is thereby illegal (NRF 2014). As to gifts and hospitality, there are no specific guidelines or monetary thresholds under Bangladeshi laws and regulations. As a guideline, companies are advised to consider the Government Servants (Conduct) Rules, which stipulates that government servants may accept gifts, provided that the value does not exceed 500 taka (USD 6.50). The Anti-Corruption Commission Act provides the legal framework for the independent Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) to ensure transparency in the public sector. The ACC is subject to political influence and has become ineffective (FitW 2015). The Right to Information Act (view a summary here) is designated to play an important role in ensuring transparency and accountability. Bangladesh has ratified the United Nations Convention against Corruption.

Civil Society
The press in Bangladesh is considered to be 'partly free' (FoP 2015). The media environment is moderately active and public criticism of the government is common and vocal (FitW 2015; HRR 2014). Legal and regulatory framework allows for some restrictions, and physical attacks and harassment against reporters have recently increased (FitW 2015). According to some journalists and human rights NGOs, journalists engage in self-censorship particularly due to fear of security force retribution (HRR 2014). Freedom of association and assembly is guaranteed by the constitution but is not always respected in practice (HRR 2014). Similarly, freedom of speech and expression are restricted (HRR 2014). Civil society plays a role in public debate, yet are often connected to political parties and do not always act independently (BTI 2014).

Sources
 
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I don't realize what the point of this thread is. Every country in South Asia is corrupt.
 
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I don't realize what the point of this thread is. Every country in South Asia is corrupt.

BD is just way more corrupt than the others, like really really terrible (and worse stagnant)

https://www.transparency.org/news/feature/corruption_perceptions_index_2016

BD: Rank 145/176, Score 2016 = 26, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 0

Pakistan: Rank 116/176, Score 2016 = 32, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 5

India: Rank 79/176, Score 2016 = 40, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 4
 
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I don't realize what the point of this thread is. Every country in South Asia is corrupt.

and that is the point.

BD is just way more corrupt than the others, like really really terrible (and worse stagnant)

https://www.transparency.org/news/feature/corruption_perceptions_index_2016

BD: Rank 145/176, Score 2016 = 26, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 0

Pakistan: Rank 116/176, Score 2016 = 32, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 5

India: Rank 79/176, Score 2016 = 40, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 4

excuse me. In south Asian territory , India is much more currepted rather then BD.

corruption-index-26012017081503-1000x0.jpg
 
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BD is just way more corrupt than the others, like really really terrible (and worse stagnant)

https://www.transparency.org/news/feature/corruption_perceptions_index_2016

BD: Rank 145/176, Score 2016 = 26, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 0

Pakistan: Rank 116/176, Score 2016 = 32, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 5

India: Rank 79/176, Score 2016 = 40, Improvement in score from 2012 - 2016 = 4

India is worse. More corrupted than Bangladesh and Pakistan put together.
 
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Rice from govt. depots entering black market

Police and Rab held 12 trucks in port city
Business Report

busi01.jpg

When the country is facing food shortage and the government is importing rice on emergency basis, hoarders and black marketers are out to exploit the situation by stealing food grains from government food depots and silos. Twelve trucks were seized last week in port city and many more may be on run.

It appears that government appointed food distributors are selling delivery vouchers to black marketers and making hefty profit without reaching food grains to local dealers. . On the other hand, hoarders and black marketers are helping to create artificial supply shortage in the market by retaining supply for few days and then claiming high price from retailers selling rice in the market.
Police and Rab seized as many as 3,096 tones of rice in seven trucks in the port city in Wednesday while being smuggled out of government depots packed in jute sacks bearing the insignia of the Directorate General of Food.

The directorate officials, however, claimed the rice seized from seven trucks was not theirs, then the big question is why they are packed in bags having seal of the Department on the bags.
Meanwhile, a Chittagong court on Thursday sent the manager of the Halisahar central storage depot (CSD) to jail from where the rice was allegedly stolen, along with four truckers in connection with the incident.

In another development, Rapid Action Battalion-7 seized another truck loaded with
13.5 tones of rice loaded with 270 sacks from the city. The vehicle was left abandoned in Akbar Shah area.
The question remains: who owns the rice packed in sacks inscribed with the words
“For Directorate General of Food”? Officials of the food directorate inspected all 126 government food depots in Chittagong and found their rice stock intact.

Mahbubur Rahman, regional food comptroller of the directorate, said they found 2,104 tones of rice and 2,799 tones of wheat in the warehouses which matched their records in the ledger.
Rab-7 officials said a total of 3,096 sacks of rice were seized from the seven trucks on from Halisahar and City Gate areas. The Rab picked up CSD Manager Pranayan Chakma and four truckers during the drive.
According to Rab-7 Assistant Director Mimtanur Rahman, all the sacks bore the seal of the Directorate General of Food.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=7&date=0#Tid=14435

Come on bro, this is the BD section. :lol:, facts don't work here...
What ??? This shows that Bangladesh is more corrupt than any one in South Asia barring Afghanistan !!! :lol:
right.jpg


@M.R.9 FULL MEMBER
excellent.jpg
 
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I guess-

They will be fooled by those who are fools themselves.

Rice from govt. depots entering black market

Police and Rab held 12 trucks in port city
Business Report

busi01.jpg

When the country is facing food shortage and the government is importing rice on emergency basis, hoarders and black marketers are out to exploit the situation by stealing food grains from government food depots and silos. Twelve trucks were seized last week in port city and many more may be on run.

It appears that government appointed food distributors are selling delivery vouchers to black marketers and making hefty profit without reaching food grains to local dealers. . On the other hand, hoarders and black marketers are helping to create artificial supply shortage in the market by retaining supply for few days and then claiming high price from retailers selling rice in the market.
Police and Rab seized as many as 3,096 tones of rice in seven trucks in the port city in Wednesday while being smuggled out of government depots packed in jute sacks bearing the insignia of the Directorate General of Food.

The directorate officials, however, claimed the rice seized from seven trucks was not theirs, then the big question is why they are packed in bags having seal of the Department on the bags.
Meanwhile, a Chittagong court on Thursday sent the manager of the Halisahar central storage depot (CSD) to jail from where the rice was allegedly stolen, along with four truckers in connection with the incident.

In another development, Rapid Action Battalion-7 seized another truck loaded with
13.5 tones of rice loaded with 270 sacks from the city. The vehicle was left abandoned in Akbar Shah area.
The question remains: who owns the rice packed in sacks inscribed with the words
“For Directorate General of Food”? Officials of the food directorate inspected all 126 government food depots in Chittagong and found their rice stock intact.

Mahbubur Rahman, regional food comptroller of the directorate, said they found 2,104 tones of rice and 2,799 tones of wheat in the warehouses which matched their records in the ledger.
Rab-7 officials said a total of 3,096 sacks of rice were seized from the seven trucks on from Halisahar and City Gate areas. The Rab picked up CSD Manager Pranayan Chakma and four truckers during the drive.
According to Rab-7 Assistant Director Mimtanur Rahman, all the sacks bore the seal of the Directorate General of Food.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=7&date=0#Tid=14435


View attachment 413166

@M.R.9 FULL MEMBER
View attachment 413168

ha ha ha bro did u give me world cup ? ha ha ha
 
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12:00 AM, August 16, 2017 / LAST MODIFIED: 12:00 AM, August 16, 2017
Graft brings People's Leasing to its knees
It struggles to repay deposits and fails to attract fresh deposits despite offering higher rate of returns
graft_0.jpg

Jebun Nesa Alo

People's Leasing and Financial Services, an A-grade stock as recently as 2014, has been reduced to rubble by rampant corruption by its previous set of directors.

“It will take a long time to recover the huge loss,” said a senior executive of People's seeking to remain unnamed.

The non-bank financial institution's woes started after some of its previous directors took margin loans worth about Tk 328 crore under its capital market investment portfolio.

The margin loans were taken directly and indirectly in the name of their institutions, violating rules. The NBFI could not recover the sums.

A margin loan is a loan made by a broker to an investor for the purpose of buying securities. It is secured by the client's collateral.

“The irregularities had been going on since 2002. When the central bank identified the corruption, it was too late in the day,” the People's senior executive added.

When word got out in 2014 of the colossal corruption, big depositors ditched the NBFI, leaving it in a cash crunch.

Small depositors too have one foot out of the door even though the troubled NBFI is offering returns as high as 10 percent -- almost double that being offered by banks.

Banks and other NBFIs, which also borrow and lend among themselves, are also showing unwillingness to lend to the troubled company.

The institution is facing a fund shortage of Tk 40 crore to 50 crore every month, said the Bangladesh Bank in a report.

People's net loss widened 33.33 percent to Tk 112 crore in 2016 -- a sharp reversal in fortune as the NBFI had made a profit of about Tk 20 crore two years earlier.

“The condition of People's has become so bad in recent months that it cannot maintain the regulatory capital requirement,” said a senior BB official.

NBFIs must keep 2.5 percent of their total deposits with the central bank and 5 percent of their total liabilities in liquid form with themselves.

People's fell short on both the regulatory requirements by Tk 95.46 crore in May this year and the trend continued into July, according to the report.

At the end of last year, its deposits stood at Tk 1,600 crore, down from Tk 1,626 crore a year earlier.

Its provisioning shortfall is also on the rise: it stood at Tk 1,568 crore at the end of December last year. Of the provision shortfall, Tk 924 crore was accumulated loss.

The NBFI is concentrating on paying off previous liabilities by taking on high-cost deposits and as a result, its the lending activities have slowed down, said the central bank report.

At the end of last year, People's total loans stood at Tk 1,344 crore, down 11 percent year-on-year. Of the sum, 57.96 percent was defaults.

Until 2014, People's was amongst the “A” category of stocks, giving at least 10 percent dividends. The following year, it was downgraded to the “Z” category, after no dividend was offered.

People's share price remained low for the last one year. On Sunday, the last trading session, its shares traded at Tk 12.80 each.

The Daily Star attempted to contact Sami Huda, managing director of People's, but he did not answer his phone at the time of filing the report.
http://www.thedailystar.net/business/graft-brings-peoples-leasing-its-knees-1449259
 
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corruption is serious and its effect all countries in south asia badly
its not good to point out india and pakistan more corruption bangladesh is no less corrupt we are small country that is why out ranking is better then them
its killing the economy and the justice system also

you have money and power then you can do a lot
 
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Widespread lawlessness should be reined in
Iqbal Hossain

The Law and Order situation in the country has deteriorated to its abysmal level. Endless corruption, illegal toll collections, widespread incidents of rape, drug-addiction, all types of crime, mayhem and murders have continued to increase while the law enforcement agencies have utterly failed to control such activities. Daily newspapers are awash with these stories while the government of the day appears to remain as mute a spectator as ever.

The Anti-corruption Commission (ACC) has apparently taking some actions against those involved in corruption but there is hardly any visible impact. The ACC is learnt have received as many as 95 thousand complaints from different quarters on corruption against individuals and agencies. Some people have been arrested in the last one and half years but not many seem to have been punished.

Corruption galore
Newspaper stories say large quantities of wheat and rich have disappeared from different government warehouses. News items have complained that food and other commodities meant for relief operations have ended up in private warehouses of some businessmen. While ministers and officials of concerned departments have made public statements about stern actions against the offenders and that is the end of it. No follow up actions have since been reported; neither the corrupt officials or businessmen been taken to task.

Only last Sunday (13 August), a report said that 68 tonnes of steel products went missing from the Chittagong Port costing the berth operator Taka 22 lakh as fine. Similarly, local power company energypac imported 700 tonnes of pre-engineered steel products worth Tk 3.4 crore from China for making sheds at Rooppur Nuclear Power Plant also went missing from the port.

This missing consignment forms part of a list of growing complaints against the Chittagong Port authorities through which over 80 percent of the country’s foreign trade is handled.
Contractors have been found to be using bamboos instead of rods in the government-financed construction works in the schools and other places but they get away with it because they are closely linked to the local ruling party leaders. Thousands of crores of taka worth of bank deposits have been laundered by the influential businessmen and industrialists in Dhaka in connivance with bank officials but the perpetrators have escaped proper punishment because of their close connections with the high and mighty in the power that be.

Likewise, illegal subscription collections are going on in the capital city and everywhere in the country under the guidance of powerful ruling party leaders. Law enforces can’t do anything because they are also kept in the loop. It is also alleged that the members of the Chattra League and Jubo League are involved in these acts. As mentioned, since law enforcers can’t beat them, so they too join them.

Drugs and its impact
The numbers of rape victims in the country are rising through the sky; even little girls are not spared. It is the same story everywhere –perpetrators are connected to the influential people and are getting away with such crimes. Police don’t dare to touch them.
All these and many other incidents have been reported in the newspapers and all agree that perhaps larger number of such heinous criminal incidents remains unreported in the media.
According to the report of the Mohila Parisad, 686 children and women have been raped in the last 7 month of the year and 36 more of such crime took place only in the first 5 days of August.

Drug-addiction has increased in the country beyond anybody’s imagination. Today the teenagers and young people belonging to relatively well off families are taking to drugs and in the process destroying themselves and the society. The number of drug takers is very high and the easy availability of drugs such as yaba tablets, heroin, phensydil etc all over the country is helping the quick spread of drug addiction. Concerned government agencies know how extensive the rate of drug prevalence in the country and how quickly it has spread amongst the younger people.

The experts say, the incidence of such drug addiction is seemingly leading to the rise of sex-related crimes in the urban areas. These drugs are said to be sex stimulating too. Drugs are coming from foreign countries illegally – mostly from India and Myanmar. Hundreds of thousands pieces of yaba tablets and phesydil bottles are entering Bangladesh every day in an organized manner.

From time to time, newspapers report that law enforces have recovered thousands of pieces of yaba tablets and other items from smugglers, or its couriers in the country. It is quite clear that the discovery of gold smuggling in the Dhaka airport, only one in hundreds of such smuggling cases is detected. Similarly only a few cases of drug shipments are intercepted by the law enforcers and this means much larger quantity of smuggled drugs elude them.

The linchpins remain undetected
This brings one to the question that how a huge operation for marketing such large quantity of drugs are possible in the country without the knowledge of the concerned agencies? Such an operation cannot be conducted by a handful of smugglers and their foot soldiers – drug peddlers. It takes a large number of people – in fact thousands of them – to be involved in such large scale operations and logically therefore, it has to be visible in some way or other to the concerned agencies.

Powerful government agencies like directorate of Drugs and Narcotic Control and multiple other related agencies, whose jobs are to detect smuggling and drug marketing, have seemingly not been able to do their job properly. After all, the smugglers and their operations, however powerful they may be, simply cannot function without the knowledge these agencies for years and decades.

While some smalltime drug peddlers and gold carriers have been nabbed by the law enforces from time to time and were duly published in the media, but the real big wigs of the operations remained undetected. One can, therefore, genuinely ask, how can they remain undetected for such a long time unless they enjoy backing from the higher ups.

Iqbal Hossain is a retired senior government official

http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx?ID=4&date=0#Tid=14591
 
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