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Bangladesh Targets Fugitives and Money Launderers in Canada

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Bangladesh Targets Fugitives and Money Launderers in Canada

December 22, 2020, 10:40 am

Bangladesh is once again putting pressure on Canada to extradite the alleged killer of the nation’s founding father while claiming that a neighbourhood in the Greater Toronto Area has become a haven for Bangladeshi money launderers. After years of failed negotiations, Bangladesh is pushing for a global signature campaign to ask for the extradition of fugitive Noor Chowdhury, who is alleged to be one of the assassins of the country’s founder, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Chowdhury is a former Bangladeshi military officer who was convicted in absentia in August 1975 for the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman aka Bangabandhu and his family were brutally killed in August 1975 by some army officials.

Out of the 12 convicted, five were hanged in 2010, one died and six are on the run. Chowdhury was granted visitor status in Canada in 1996 and hasn’t left the country since.

Last week, the High Court in Dhaka revoked a previous “freedom fighter gallantry award” granted to Chowdhury and the others involved in the assassination.

Bangladesh Foreign Minister Dr. A.K. Abdul Momen is now urging all Bangladeshis at home and abroad to support a signature campaign to demand the return of Chowdhury and the other fugitive convicted killers, who face death by firing squads in their home country.

“If we can have lakhs (hundreds of thousands) or a crore (ten million) signatures on the demand … we can put pressure on those countries [where the killers are now residing] to get them back,” he said, according to the media in Dhaka.

Momen also urged Bangladeshi expatriates to hold demonstrations in front of the residences of the identified fugitive killers in their respective countries to let their neighborhoods know that a murderer is living beside them.

Chowdhury reportedly lives in a condo in Etobicoke near a Bangladeshi-Canadian enclave known as the “Begum Para” of Toronto. This area around neighbouring Mississauga’s Sheridan Centre was identified recently by media in Dhaka as a haven for Bangladeshi money launderers.

The Bangla term “Begum Para” originally derived from Urdu “Begumpura”, literally means “colony of wives” and refers to locales where women of expatriate workers live with their families and get regular remittances from their overseas-based husbands.

The High Court in Dhaka has now asked government agencies to compile a list of Bangladeshi dual-passport holders and a list of suspected money launderers living overseas, including Canada, to be delivered to it by Feb. 28.

Momen confirmed some cases of money laundering involving the Bangladeshi community in Canada in a press briefing.

“Most of the money launderers in the Canada Begum Para are [Bangladeshi] government officials, followed by politicians and businessmen,” he said. The minister, however, did not mention any names.

“An expatriate has given us some information about this issue. We were surprised. We had thought that politicians may have purchased these houses. But we have information that most of the houses there have been bought by government officials.

Some are retired Bangladeshi government officials, while others are serving officers. Their children are living there. Besides, a number of businessmen have bought some houses in Canada.

“This is something interesting. Normally, we think government officials are not so financially solvent. So, how could they buy houses in Canada? We don’t know how it is possible.

Maybe their credit rating is high,” read a partial transcript of Momen’s interview with the media.
Current estimates put the Bangladeshi-Canadian population at about 100,000 people.

From 2015 to 2019, 16,325 Bangladeshi citizens were admitted as permanent residents to Canada, said Immigration Canada.

Members of the Bangladeshi-Canadian community who spoke to New Canadian Media said they were fearful that the anti-money laundering sweep may grab innocent women who get remittances from their husbands overseas.

“It does not look like it is a targeted operation…the government in Bangladesh is going on a massive sweep for suspects,” said a Bangladeshi-Canadian community worker in Vancouver, who asked not to be named.

“This is going to cause some people to snitch on others and create problems,” he said.

Fabian Dawson, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, New Canadian Media

 
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Credit rating high enough to buy houses in Toronto? Dudes and their wives must be earning six figures a year each
 
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Out of the 12 convicted, five were hanged in 2010, one died and six are on the run.

who face death by firing squads in their home country.

There lies the problem.

We should have planned for extraditions when the trials began and took the death penalty off the table. No Western county will extradite a person if death penalty is on the table. Not Canada, not UK, not EU.
 
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To catch Chowdhury and other fugitives should take a back seat. Instead, the GoB should pursue the Begumpur families of those corrupt officials in BD.
 
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There lies the problem.

We should have planned for extraditions when the trials began and took the death penalty off the table. No Western county will extradite a person if death penalty is on the table. Not Canada, not UK, not EU.

I do not think US or Australia will either, but that is not the crux of the issue.

It is how much pull Bangladesh has money-wise with some of these 'fence-sitting' countries to have a bilateral extradition treaty.
 
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By reading the text of the news, I have a feeling that GoB wants to sign an extradition treaty with Canada, but the purpose is to bring back the Mujib killer fugitives and not the BegumPur families.

They all belong to the BAL corrupt group. BAL will not certainly cut their own legs. After all, the bureaucrats and BAL politicians are living a hard life in politics only to earn two extra Pices from BD by corruption.

They deserve some extra money because they are almost giving their precious lives to attain the national goal of achieving a Developed Status of BD by 2041, a world economic record.
 
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I do not think US or Australia will either, but that is not the crux of the issue.

It is how much pull Bangladesh has money-wise with some of these 'fence-sitting' countries to have a bilateral extradition treaty.

Extradition is a big ask and the death penalty complicate such matters. Take Julian Assange's extradition as example, no less than US Attorney General's office had to give assurance that US will not seek death penalty. Only then could UK government green light the US extradition request. The assurance did not satisfy Labour and human rights groups who took the UK government to task based on statements US politicians had made in public. In our case, we went ahead and did the deed. We won't be able to use plausible deniability on death penalty. This is our fault. We made decisions for political expediency without long-term planning. I don't know if Canada will sign a bilateral extradition treaty with us after this.

Economic leverage can only go so far. China has done a lot of arm twisting to free Meng Wanzhou but Canadian government has withstood the Chinese pressure. If China with all its economic might can't free a business executive then what hope do we have?
 
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Extradition is a big ask and the death penalty complicate such matters. Take Julian Assange's extradition as example, no less than US Attorney General's office had to give assurance that US will not seek death penalty. Only then could UK government green light the US extradition request. The assurance did not satisfy Labour and human rights groups who took the UK government to task based on statements US politicians had made in public. In our case, we went ahead and did the deed. We won't be able to use plausible deniability on death penalty. This is our fault. We made decisions for political expediency without long-term planning. I don't know if Canada will sign a bilateral extradition treaty with us after this.

Economic leverage can only go so far. China has done a lot of arm twisting to free Meng Wanzhou but Canadian government has withstood the Chinese pressure. If China with all its economic might can't free a business executive then what hope do we have?

I see your point.

I believe the 'bugaboo effect' of 'death penalty' at home is enough, Hasina just wants to scare the opposition and detractors. There was no planning to actually hang these folks then. It's just the 'threat' of an imaginary noose forever hanging over these people's heads...
 
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I don't think anyone cares about the assassination of mujib and his family where are the chuckloads outside Bangladeshi embassies?

Never been a pressing issue for most Bangladeshis even some of the awami league
 
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They hang people without a fair trial in Bangladesh.
 
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Miami dolphins got a better chance of winning the super bowl than the BD government extradite people from Canada !
 
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