Congratulations, Bangladesh: You Have Built a Safe Haven for Criminals Like Samia Islam Farzana
TRUE STORY

Congratulations, Bangladesh: You Have Built a Safe
Haven for Criminals Like Samia Islam Farzana

MS
by M. SHAKERNovember 14, 2025
Samia known as Samia Islam Farzana. Bangladeshi International Scammer.

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Congratulations, Bangladesh: You Have Built a Safe Haven for Criminals Like Samia Islam Farzana

Today, I want to extend my deepest congratulations to the PBI, the Bangladesh Police Department, the Ministry of Justice, and—sadly—the entire government system of Bangladesh.

Why congratulations?

Because they have succeeded in building something extraordinary.

Not a nation of justice.

Not a nation of safety.

Not a nation where the poor are protected.

No.

They have built the world’s safest paradise for criminals. A safe haven where thieves, scammers, and cyber-criminals flourish like kings. A land where justice sleeps for years, where accountability does not exist, and where victims—local or international—stand alone, abandoned, unheard, and mocked by the very institutions that were created to protect them.

I write this not from imagination, not from rumors, not from politics.

I write this as a direct victim.

A man who crossed 10,000 kilometers to serve the children of Bangladesh—only to be robbed, betrayed, and then ignored by the justice system that promised fairness.

I am the living example of what happens when a criminal commits a serious crime in Bangladesh:

They walk free. They laugh. They celebrate. And justice dies.

A Country Where $500 Can Delay Justice for Years

In Bangladesh, you can commit major financial crimes, cybercrimes, fraud, theft—even sabotage an international NGO serving the poor—and still go home and enjoy tea in peace.

Why?

Because the system is designed—not accidentally, but structurally—to reward criminals.

Pay 500 dollars here, pass a message there, bribe a middleman, and suddenly you become untouchable. You can destroy a non-profit organization. You can steal humanitarian funds meant for the poorest families. You can sabotage a mission of God. You can betray the very hands that fed you.

And the police?

Silent.

Slow.

Sleeping.

The Ministry of Justice?

Missing in action.

PBI?

Pretending to investigate while criminals enjoy picnics.

Bangladesh has achieved what no other nation has done so flawlessly:

A justice system where criminals feel safe and victims feel punished.

An NGO Robbed… and the Government Stood Still

I came to Bangladesh with nothing but faith, love, and a mission to serve God’s forgotten children. I invested my own money, my own time, my own life and lifted a trash named Samia known as Samia Islam, Samia Farzana and Shahed Anwar Shadhin. Two trash Bangladeshi Scammers and their garbage familes.

And then I was robbed—openly, shamelessly, publicly—by the very people I lifted out of poverty.

But the true crime is not what two individuals did.

The true crime is that Bangladesh allowed it.

A country where international NGOs are robbed and the government does not move an inch is not a country facing a crime problem.

It is a country protecting crime.

If Harsh Words Are Required to Wake You Up, Here They Are

I tried polite letters.

I tried calm explanations.

I tried respectful communication.

No one cared.

So here is the truth, raw and honest:

Bangladesh has become a criminal’s dreamland.

A place where crime is cheap, justice is expensive, and honesty is punished.

If this system continues, no honest NGO will ever step foot in Bangladesh again.

And millions of poor children will pay the price—not the criminals, not the officers, not the ministers.

Because when justice collapses, a nation collapses with it.