BNP’s Mosharraf charged with money laundering

The charge sheet will be placed before the magistrate on Monday, following the weekend and government holidays

The Anti Corruption Commission (ACC) yesterday filed charge sheet against BNP standing committee member Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain for allegedly siphoning off Tk9.54cr to England.

ACC director Nasim Anwar, who is also the case investigation officer, filed the charge sheet at the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Court, the ACC’s public relations officer, Pranab Kumar Bhattacharya, confirmed to the Dhaka Tribune.

The charge sheet will be placed before the magistrate on Monday, following the weekend and government holidays, court sources said.

The commission, on August 7, approved the filing of a charge sheet against Mosharraf, who is a former health minister, after investigations into his assets by the anti-graft body revealed irregularities.

Although the ACC interrogated the BNP leader’s wife, Bilkis Akhter Hossain, she was not charge-sheeted because she was not found to be involved.

“During interrogation, Mosharraf confessed that he transferred the sum to his wife’s account but that his wife was not involved with the laundering, so she was spared from the charge sheet,” ACC director Nasim Anwar told the Dhaka Tribune.

According to the charge sheet, Mosharraf concealed information about illegally amassing over £800,000, roughly equivalent to Tk95,395,380, by abusing his power as health minister during the 2001-2006 BNP government.

The amount was deposited in a joint fixed-term deposit account of Lloyds TSB Offshore Private Banking in the British Crown dependency of Guernsey. The account was jointly owned by Mosharraf and his wife Bilkis Akhter Hossain.

As the BNP leader had not taken permission from Bangladesh Bank to open the account abroad, it was a clear violation of section 5 of the Foreign Currency Control Act, 1947, sources said.

In the charge sheet, it was stated that the former minister claimed that he had deposited the money while residing with his wife in the UK from 1969 to 1975 to study and work, but had failed to submit any documents authenticating the claim.

The ACC official said the commission would take initiatives to repatriate the money if the court found Mosharraf guilty of money laundering.

ACC Director Nasim Anwar filed the money laundering case with Ramna police station against Mosharraf on February 2.

After the case had been filed, the former minister secured advance bail on February 10 from the High Court.

The anti-graft body then filed a petition with the Appellate Division, which later rejected his advance bail.

Khandaker Mosharraf was arrested on March 12 and is now in jail in connection with the case.

Source: Dhaka Tribune