Summary of Corrupt Payments Made at the Direction of SIEMENS
BANGLADESH to Arafat Rahman Koko. Three other people close to Hawa Bhobon
including Telecommunications Minister Aminul Haque also received a huge amount,
which I am not bringing in this table. I have exact dates and amount they
received from bribe from SIEMENS which I will disclose in a separate write-up.
Approx. Date of Payment
Recipient
How Payment Was Made
Amount of Payment (Expressed In USD)
May 4, 2001
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intercom
$100,000.00
July 19, 2001
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intercom
$100,000.00
February 28, 2002
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intercom
$200,000.00
Late December 2002
Arafat Rahman Koko
Unknown
$12,000.00
December 2003
Shahrin Islam Tuhin (Khaleda Zia’s nephew)
Unknown
$1,000.00
May 12, 2004
Arafat Rahman Koko
Cash
$30,398.83
November 2004
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intermediary A
$177,863.00
December 3, 2004
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intermediary A
$186,312.00
January 13, 2005
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intermediary A
$213,858.00
August 18,2005
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intermediary A
$180,000.00
November 15, 2005
Arafat Rahman Koko
Through Intermediary A
$200,000.00
March 23, 2006
Arafat Rahman Koko
From Siemens San Francisco , California account through Intermediary A
$80,000.00
March 23, 2006
Arafat Rahman Koko
From Siemens San Francisco , California account through Intermediary A
$80,000.00
SYMANS bribe money was channeled to form Islamic terrorist group in Bangladesh
Telecommunications Minister Aminul Haque of Jamaat-BNP alliance government of Khaleda Zia was also involved in this SYMANS bribery scandal. US prestigious media outlet PBS
Conducted an investigative report under its Frontline on how Telecommunications Minister Aminul Haque used SYMANS bribe money to fund terrorist groups Jamaatul Mujahedin Bangladesh (JMB). I will ask readers to watch prestigious international media PBS investigative report on how BNP funded fundamentalist terrorist organization JMB in Bangladesh .
Warid
Deal: He
also put $2m in Hong Kong banks, steps taken to sell property to pay govt;
Babar minted $7m out of the project
Investigation into the controversial Warid Telecom deal has
revealed how Arafat Rahman Koko, Khaleda Zia’s younger son, ripped off millions
to buy property in Dubai and build bank deposits in Hong Kong.
Latest interrogation has also revealed that former home minister
Lutfozzaman Babar had actually made a huge fortune of $7 million from the deal.
Steps have already been taken to sell a house in Dubai that he
illegally bought in the name of the son of Ali Asgar Lobi, a former BNP
lawmaker, to deposit $1.5 million with the exchequer as part of the rip-off
amount of the Warid Telecom. Lobi’s son received instruction from his family
yesterday to sell the house.
Sources said Warid had obtained its operating licence in
Bangladesh in exchange for a $15 million graft deal with the Hawa Bhaban
clique. The investigators have come to know that the money was shared by Koko,
Lobi and Babar.
With his share of the booty, Koko bought the Dubai house and
deposited another $2 million with two banks in Hong Kong. During interrogation,
Babar said he retained $7 million of the deal — $3 million he kept with him and
the rest with his brother. The former state minister for home promised to pay
back $4.5 million, but the rest $2.5 million has been sent abroad through his
brother. Babar also confessed that another $3.5 million is lying with Lobi. But
Lobi, who is now in jail, has said he has only $1 million with him.
Warid owned by Sheikh Nahayan Mubarak Al Nahayan of the UAE
obtained its operating licence in 2005 and the deal was since then seen with
suspicion as the group paid a small amount — only $50 million — to the
government for the deal.
Throughout the BNP-led four-party rule, Koko remained a low-key
figure in the Khaleda family and let his elder brother Tarique take a leading
role in politics and corrupt private deals. But staying out of public scrutiny,
Koko made his fortunes from various shady and illegal businesses. His only
publicly known business was of billboard advertisement, which also smacks of
allegations of monopolising.
Meantime, the government exchequer has received Tk 435.45 crore
until June 6 that the joint forces recovered from different corrupt suspects
and business groups involved in shady deals.
Sources said another Tk 100 crore is expected to be deposited by
end of this week.
James Finlay, a British tea company, deposited Tk 237.65 crore
to the Bangladesh Bank on April 19 as part of the money taken out against sell
of its tea estates in Sylhet. MGH Group owned by Anis Ahmed Gorky deposited Tk
23.80 crore on April 23 as part of a deal to return the money he kept from
Khaleda’s son Tarique Rahman.
Bashundhara Group returned Tk 77 crore on May 28. Kazi Saleemul
Haque, a director of Prime Bank, returned Tk 20 crore on May 30 on behalf of
Babar, who received the money from Bashundhara Group Chairman Ahmed Akhtar
Sobhan as part of the deal to save his son from a murder case. On the same day,
Mohammad Shahjahan of Kabir Steel Ltd of Chittagong deposited Tk 7 crore.
Controversial Chittagong businessman S Alam, who had close link with Tarique,
deposited Tk 60 crore on June 6 and on the same day, Amin Ahmed Group deposited
Tk 10 crore
Thursday, May 03, 2007
By Ikram Sehgal
…… what of the character of the mother, Khaleda Zia, who looked
the other way while her sons were robbing the country blind, what about her
responsibility to the electorate that made her prime
minister? And why should we give Tariq Rahman special treatment because his
mother brought him up as a spoilt brat? If the army’s hierarchy has any false
sense of loyalty they should collectively take
a walk every morning among the poor, hungry, shelterless of Bangladesh and look
at the sheer helplessness in their desolate eyes. If they do not discover to
whom their loyalty must be given, they are either blind or not true to the oath
of allegiance they took. If the military hierarchy makes a political deal with
the corrupt, whoever they may be, there is no hope for Bangladesh. If someone
robs a house you put him in jail for a few years, white-collar criminals who
take advantage
of their office and/or connections must go to jail many more years.
Bangladesh is at a peculiar crossroads in its nationhood,
whether to carry out effective accountability before returning to full
democracy or let public pressure hasten the renewal of political activity and
allow the corrupt to further corrupt an already corrupted system. It would mean
disaster; it will affect the survival of tens of millions. Given the
temptations inherent and the exhortations of the motivated,
the army’s hierarchy has done well in staying within the constitution and
instead of acquiring direct power supporting civilian authority.
The Bangladesh Army chief, Lieutenant-General Moeen Ahmad, has
stayed true to his word in not getting carried away by the opportunity to ride
into town publicly as the country’s saviour. He must remain careful in not
saying or writing anything that may give any inclination of political ambition
in the future. Vested interest will not spare any opportunity to misconstrue
good intention and undercut
the credibility of the army’s intention and role behind the scenes because that
will erode its effectiveness. It is of the utmost importance that the army’s
reputation (and his) is not tainted by hint
of personal ambition, except solely and wholly the well-being and future
prosperity of Bangladesh.
Tariq Rahman’s case makes for a crossroads for accountability,
if Ziaur Rahman’s sons are shown any leniency then the whole process of
accountability will be compromised. The military hierarchy will then
have no business holding anyone in Bangladesh accountable. Tariq Rahman and
Arafat Rahman are acid tests for the Bangladesh Army. Fail to make them
accountable and you have failed your uniform and your country. …..
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