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Fraud by Indian Buyers - 22 garment exporters not getting payment

so you can judge all Indians based on this incident which might be because of some issues which will get sorted out..
you bangladeshi kids are so easily irritated that you do not see this line in the news



Also this is an isolated incident and not all indian importers are doing this

Brother read again, i didn't say all the Indians. I said many. We ain't irritated, we are happy to see more 'not so-kid' big Indian with their kid mouth how bravely they back up soon leaving behind their old impression again why we shouldn't have struck the deal to begin with.
Don't worry PDF doesn't represent the whole of Bangladesh or India, it's just a lot of trolling and few intelligent piece of works.

on topic- i hope this will get sorted out soon and it doesn't get repeated, and remain an isolated situation. India can buy garments products very cheaply from us, but dunno why they stopped exporting cotton, we could have bought their whole lot i guess.
 
Indian der bole takar komti nai? Chorami kore ken?


Cheers!!!
dada,
choto company der shaati trading korle amon problem hotei parre... trading partner bhalo selct kora uchhit jemon pantaloon, reliance, arvindmills etc.
 
dada,
choto company der shaati trading korle amon problem hotei parre... trading partner bhalo selct kora uchhit jemon pantaloon, reliance, arvindmills etc.

Don't agree always bro, small business man's are vital to any country's economy, in trade there should be trust. In our country if you can earn this trust once, then your word of mouth is enough. we don't need bank guarantee for everything.
 
Good to see the warm relations Bangladeshis are enjoying after celebrating with India in 1971.
 
Redirect Notice Correspondent


London, Nov 11 (bdnews24.com) – A Birmingham court has convicted a Bangladeshi of fraud with Hajj pilgrims.
Chowdhury Haffez Ahmad, 38, convicted by Birmingham Crown Court on Nov 4, is now awaiting verdict in the case on Dec 9.
He is currently out on bail.
Haffez ran an agency, Hellenic Travels, in Birmingham's Bengali district Small Heath and was a resident of Stoney Stanton Road.
Court recorder Mark Rhind said the court convicted him after five days of hearing and his sentence may be a jail term.
In 2009, Haffez sold a £10,000 trip package to a four-member family promising five-star services in Saudi Arabia. But the family did not receive the promised facilities.
Vid Ahluwalia, chief of Birmingham City Council Trading Standard team, who conducted the case against Haffez, said the measure is first of its kind.
"This is a big incident since there are so many Muslim residents in Birmingham," he added.
Every year about 25,000 Muslims travel from the UK to observe the Hajj and the British government sends a special delegation to Saudi Arabia to look after them.
But as the number of pilgrims grows, agentsand sub-agents are popping up and incidents of fraud have increased.

What a shame Muslim Bangladeshi doing fraud with Hajj pilgrims?? How low can one get?
 
they commit fraud as a country: have the international contractors been paid yet for their work during the commonwealth games?

my point is: blame the nation, but don't blame the individuals

Chinese are the biggest frauds and copycats. Be it brand, electronics, shoe, slippers, caps, coffee shops, KFC etc etc etc. You name anything and they copy it. so yes i take your point and as you said blame the nation not some individuals so here we go - China is a fraud nation and a nation of/for cheats/thief..

---------- Post added at 03:01 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:59 PM ----------

Good to see the warm relations Bangladeshis are enjoying after celebrating with India in 1971.

I think I agree with you. India should have ignored Bangladeshi killings by Pakistani army and let them deal with their sufferings themselves.. Looking at the BD section, all you can figure out is that these losers got nothing else then to talk about India.. The more you read their comments the more you feel India/Indira did a mistake in 1971. India should have just closed the borders tight then and order the killing of people who try to cross over..I think they deserve it..
 
The latest of Indians increasing their fraudulance portfolio is not paying BPL 2000's hotel bills. Angan Ganguly of game on is currently avoiding questions in that regard and not answering phone calls. Will the Malaunic nature of Bharatis ever go away?

No, it will not go away. learn to deal with it or start sleeping with chinis and just hope that the biggest cheats do not come and bite your backside too bad..
 
The news is one sided ..they never enquired about indian companies stand on the matter .. If business is done with legal channel where is the question of fraud ?
Did they register any complaint ?
Did indian company already refuse to pay ?
This is a clear case of delayed payment ..
Bangla companies can claim interest on delay ..

It seems when it comes to your career you guys opted for the best and when it comes to countrys future you people act like teenagers and your emotion roars ..


because of this industry millions bangladesi families gets daily bread and hence the people related to the industry are very much concerned for both countries relation ...but being out from the equation you kids will face nothing harsh if bilateral business goes down ...

You people never can be a good businessmen or good policy makers untill you come out of these childish prejudice ..
 
Well here we go, found this news. I guess this explains it.So much :blah: in Bangladeshi section, with zero intention to actually discuss, investigate any news. Its mudslinging from the word go.:disagree:

French luxury fund L Capital front runner to buy Lilliput| Business Standard

Cash-strapped Lilliput, the country’s largest kidswear brand, may soon get a luxury makeover.

L Capital, the private equity (PE) arm of LVMH, the world’s largest luxury goods group, has emerged the front runner to buy Lilliput’s retail assets, brand and liabilities, according to three people involved in the negotiations.

Recently, Lilliput founder Sanjeev Narula and estranged private equity investors Bain Capital and TPG had initiated a slump sale, wherein the assets, brand and liabilities would get transferred to a new company and then sold to a third party. The shareholders had roped in Avendus and Grant Thornton to advise on the sale.

With Lilliput running close to Rs 750 crore of debt, the company and Narula are finding it difficult to service it. The legal battle between Narula and the PE investors has also ensured the route to the market for equity raising or even additional bank financing has become extremely tough. The lenders had refused to release the sanctioned loan amount of Rs 200 crore because of the infighting, forcing Lilliput to meet its daily cash requirements by offering up to 30 per cent discounts at all stores. An equity infusion was becoming critical to pay back dues and manage other operating expenses.

Senior officials in the know, who did not wish to reveal their identity, told Business Standard negotiations between L Capital and a Lilliput management team had progressed the most. “There have been four key suitors. Other than L Capital, Mahindra & Mahindra, India Value Fund (IVF) and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co (KKR) had signed non-disclosure agreements to enter into negotiations to buy Lilliput. But, the L Capital negotiations are at an advanced stage. We are hoping to close the deal within a few weeks,” they said.

Added another official on condition of anonymity, “Top management employees are being interviewed by L Capital and later this week, more interviews are likely with regional staff. It is still not clear if L Capital will even buy out Narula’s original businesses of garment manufacturing and exports. Those negotiations are under way.”


Many would, however, point at the erosion of the company's valuation. According to a source, Lilliput is currently being valued at Rs 900-950 crore, inclusive of debt. "If you take the debt, you will at best be left with Rs 100-200 crore, which will be divided among the two shareholder groups. During the IPO last year, the company was looking at a Rs 2,400-crore valuation," said the source.

L Capital Asia launched a $640-million fund last year targeting emerging economies, including China and India. The Asia fund is the fourth fund by L Capital, whose best known investments include Pepe Jeans, Gant and Princess Yachts. The French fund recently picked up 8 per cent in FabIndia and had last year bought 25.5 per cent stake in India's Genesis Luxury Fashion Pvt Ltd, which distributes global luxury brands, mainly apparel and accessories.

Lilliput is the largest player in the organised kidswear market, with an estimated market share of 14.7 per cent, followed by Gini & Jony (11per cent) and Catmoss (seven per cent ), according to research company IRIS Retail. The organised kidswear market in India is estimated to be Rs 3,000 crore, only 5.3 per cent of the overall organised apparel market, growing 25 per cent annually, according to IRIS.

Started in 1991 as a supplier to some large retailers, Lilliput forayed into direct retailing with a store in New Delhi in 2003. The company currently operates 275 stores, and employs close to 14,000 people. Its retail expansion, too, has been aggressive recently. In the past year, Lilliput has added close to 100 stores, and redesigned its business model to go for bigger stores. Lilliput has been borrowing aggressively and added 6 lakh sq ft of retail space in two years compared to 2 lakh sq ft it added in eight years. But, sales didn't keep pace with the rapid growth. And, with its IPO nowhere in sight, the ballooning debt has become a trap.

The company is still making profits at an operating level. It posted a net profit of Rs 40 crore on revenues of Rs 565 crore in 2010-11 and has been targeting a turnover of Rs 950 crore in the year ending March 2012.
 
I think the Bangladeshi commerce department owes an obligation to educate their exporters on how to reduce their business risks in international trade after 22 cases have happened.
 
I think I agree with you. India should have ignored Bangladeshi killings by Pakistani army and let them deal with their sufferings themselves.. Looking at the BD section, all you can figure out is that these losers got nothing else then to talk about India.. The more you read their comments the more you feel India/Indira did a mistake in 1971. India should have just closed the borders tight then and order the killing of people who try to cross over..I think they deserve it..

No..PDF is not real world. By 1971 we effectively eliminated any threat to our Eastern border. BD will never possess a military challenge to India (atleast in the near future). Think of the alternative, we may have to post thousands of soldiers to secure our Eastern border and also Pakistan could have a strategic location to launch their short/medium range missiles. We could have been surrounded by nuclear powers. But by 1971, Indian Armed forces was free to concentrate on our northern and western borders.
 
The latest of Indians increasing their fraudulance portfolio is not paying BPL 2000's hotel bills. Angan Ganguly of game on is currently avoiding questions in that regard and not answering phone calls. Will the Malaunic nature of Bharatis ever go away?

Indians will commit fraud and steal money and goods but if they are taken to face legal system, indian govtand media get involved to create propaganda and diplomatic incident. That is how indians do business.
 
If indians are interested we can open another thread in indian forum on how indians are committing frauds all over the world. there pages and pages of the tally.
 
Indians will commit fraud and steal money and goods but if they are taken to face legal system, indian govtand media get involved to create propaganda and diplomatic incident. That is how indians do business.

Even you own crying for illegal trade worth billions of $ in Bangladesh :lol: so you are the route of this.
 
3 held with fake currency in city

Wed, 30/11/2011 - 1:10pm

Detective Branch of police arrested three people, including an Indian national, and seized counterfeit Bangladeshi currency worth Tk 2.20 crore from different parts of the capital Tuesday night.

Identities of the arrestees were not available till noon when this report was filed.

Masudur Rahman, additional deputy commissioner of Dhaka Metropolitan Police, said a team of DB police raided different parts of the capital and captured the trio.

The team seized counterfeit Bangladeshi notes of Tk 500 and Tk 1000 denominations from their possession, he added.

3 held with fake currency in city | Priyo News
 

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