Bangladesh is Turning A Paradise for Criminals, A Hell for its Citizens: How Samia Islam Farzana Buried Our National Pride.
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Bangladesh is Turning A Paradise for Criminals, A Hell for its Citizens: How Samia Islam Farzana Buried Our National Pride
The green and red of the Bangladeshi flag once stood as an eternal symbol of sacrifice, sovereignty, and the blood of martyrs.
Today, that pride is being systematically eroded.
Under the controversial actions of the Bangladesh Police and the PBI (Police Bureau of Investigation), the national identity appears to be for sale.
What the international community is witnessing is not a lapse in judgment—it is the organized collapse of a nation of 170 million people.
When state institutions protect petty criminals instead of safeguarding international contributors, the national flag is not merely lowered—it is buried under the weight of systemic corruption in Bangladesh.
At the epicenter of this national disgrace is Samia Islam Farzana, a student of Government Titumir College.
It is a chilling reflection of state decay that a 20-year-old with zero professional skills and zero integrity could bring an established international NGO to its knees.
This did not happen because of intelligence or capability—it happened because the Bangladesh justice system has become hollow and unaccountable.
Along with her accomplices Shahed Anwar Shadhin (Adamjee Cantonment College) and Jannatul Ferdous Fareha (Lalmatia Govt. Women’s College), she executed a calculated campaign involving:
Cybercrime: Unauthorized hacking and hijacking of international NGO accounts.
Theft and asset fraud: Stealing physical devices and digital assets.
Forgery and document manipulation: Erasing 15 months of humanitarian work.
Systematic deception: Repeatedly misleading law enforcement using social influence.
In any functioning society governed by law, these crimes would result in immediate prosecution.
In Bangladesh, they walk free—shielded by taxpayer-funded institutions meant to enforce justice.
PBI: The Biggest Disgrace in South Asian Law Enforcement
The PBI (Police Bureau of Investigation), once envisioned as an elite unit, has revealed itself as a monumental institutional failure.
After seven months of a sham investigation, PBI attempted to downgrade a clear case of international cyber-theft and robbery into a so-called “employee–employer dispute.”
This represents a justice system in its most toxic form.
When officers value small bribes over the dignity of their uniform, they cease to be protectors and become enemies of the state.
Corruption in Bangladesh has crossed a threshold where law enforcement does not merely ignore crime—it actively facilitates it.
It is a tragic irony that many global crime syndicates operate with more internal discipline than the police leadership involved in this case.
A Nation Sold for a Price: The Collapse of Accountability
The answer is devastatingly simple: the law in Bangladesh has become a commodity.
Evidence is negotiable. Truth is auctioned.
The current reality is unmistakable:
Law enforcement ethics: Operating below the standards of criminal organizations.
Institutional integrity: Non-existent in high-profile fraud cases.
Systemic motto: “Who paid the bribe today?”
By protecting figures like #FreelancerSamia and #FreelancerShadhin, the PBI has dragged the national flag through the dirt and transformed a country of 170 million people into a global cautionary tale—where victims are punished and criminals enjoy state-sponsored immunity.
Our Promise: Global Accountability for Cybercrime
If Bangladesh’s institutions refuse to act, the international community must.
This case is being documented and shared with international media, global NGOs, foreign investors, and law enforcement agencies such as INTERPOL.
The world will see how a “Get Out of Jail Free” card is purchased in Bangladesh for international crimes.
Samia Islam Farzana is no longer just a criminal—she has become a symbol of systemic failure.
To the PBI officers involved: you are now under global scrutiny.
The era of silent suffering is over.
The world will see the corruption of Bangladesh exactly as it is.