Transparency International urges US to help Bangladesh recover its stolen assets
UNB
Publish: 11 Sep 2024, 02:03 PM
Dhaka,
Sept 11 (UNB) - Transparency International US and Transparency International
Bangladesh have said the U.S. can show its genuine partnership by playing a
proactive role in
helping the people of
Bangladesh recover the assets that rightly belong to them and that are so
desperately needed to rebuild its future.
They have written to the
US Secretary of State and US Secretary of the Treasury seeking urgent action to
support a transparent, accountable, inclusive, and democratic future for
Bangladesh.
In their letter to
Secretary Anthony Blinken and Secretary Janet Yellen, Transparency
International U.S Executive Director Gary Kalman and TIB Executive Director
Iftekhar Zaman said as a long-standing partner of Bangladesh, the U.S. can
offer timely support at this crucial time in Bangladesh's history.
They called upon the
U.S. government to provide critical support to the interim Bangladeshi
government to address corruption and money laundering in the following ways:
1 The U.S. government
can investigate whether any assets looted by any Bangladeshi individual or
company are recoverable property in the U.S. and act swiftly to impose property
and account freezing orders as the first step to facilitate their forfeiture
and
repatriation to
Bangladesh and hold the perpetrators to account.
2 The U.S. government
could offer expertise, including from forensic accountants, lawyers
and law enforcement to
support reforms and capacity building of Bangladesh's relevant institutions
like the Anti-Corruption Commission, Financial Intelligence Unit, Criminal
Investigation Department, National Board of Revenue and Attorney General's
Office, so that they can identify stolen assets, build a robust evidence base
for freezing these assets, and facilitate swift law enforcement action to
recover them.
3 The U.S. government
could work with the governments of the UK, Canada, Australia,
EU, Singapore, Malaysia,
Hong Kong and UAE (particularly Dubai), and with the interim government, and
in-country experts, including civil society within Bangladesh, to identify key
targets for imposing financial sanctions and visa bans.
To further geopolitical
and economic objectives, the U.S. has built close ties with Bangladesh, reads
the letter dated September 10.
The U.S. is its largest
foreign investor and largest export country destination.
The U.S. relies on
Bangladesh to assist
with regional security efforts and efforts to counter terrorism, they said.
As such, in recent
years, the U.S. has strongly supported efforts to move Bangladesh toward a more
open
and democratic society,
engaging a variety of tools from trade incentives to sanctions of corrupt
public officials.
Today, they said
Bangladesh is experiencing a pivotal moment in its history.
"Peaceful student protests
against certain
discriminatory policies have grown into people's uprising against increasing
levels of inequality and
corruption attributed to the previous government of Bangladesh."
The ensuing brutal
crackdown by the law enforcement agencies has left over 1000 dead.
Now, serious evidence
regarding the misappropriation of state assets by former Bangladeshi officials
and their allies is being unearthed.
"These assets
ultimately belong to the people of
Bangladesh, which is why
we write to urge the U.S. government to identify and move to seize any such
assets in the U.S.," the letter reads.
The process to recover
those assets should begin quickly so that the
funds can help
Bangladesh build a more transparent, accountable, democratic and inclusive
future.
"Corruption
allegations involving former ministers, bankers, senior public officials, the
armed forces, and police are overwhelming," said the Executive Directors
of the two organisations.
END/UNB/MK/F