Samia’s Noble Family: Four Scammers from One Family
TRUE STORY

Samia’s Noble Family: Four Scammers from One
Family

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by M. SHAKEROctober 24, 2025
Samia’s Noble Family: Four Scammers from One Family

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Samia’s Noble Family: Four Scammers from One Family

When people hear the phrase “noble family”, they imagine respect, honesty, and dignity. They think of a household that raises children with values and protects the trust of those who help them. But the reality of Samia Islam Farzana (Samia) and her so-called noble family is the complete opposite. Instead of integrity, this family of four—Samia, her sister Jannatul Ferdous Fareha, and their own parents—turned into a network of scammers. Together, they betrayed the very people who helped them and disgraced their nation.

Betrayal While Being Helped

I came forward to serve Samia and her family. My mission was simple: to give opportunities to poor and forgotten children of God in Bangladesh. Through my scholarship program, I supported their education, their household needs, and even their savings. Samia, a student of Government Titumir College, was chosen as a young ambassador. Her sister Fareha, also supported, was trusted with equal care.

At the same time, I extended help to their parents. Instead of gratitude, the family plotted together behind closed doors. While I was paying for their future, they were silently stealing from me. While I was giving them scholarships, jobs, technology, and financial assistance, they were planning their betrayal.

A Family Crime

It is painful enough when one individual betrays your trust. But in this case, an entire family of four joined hands in deceit. Samia Farzana, also known as Freelancer Samia, not only stole money but also attacked and hijacked our digital systems. Her sister, Jannatul Ferdous Fareha, carried out her own act of betrayal — taking 200,000 taka in cash, three laptops, and two expensive phones, a theft worth nearly 500,000 taka in total. Shockingly, their parents, instead of guiding their children toward honesty and gratitude, became active participants in the fraud.

What makes this story even more tragic is that this was a Muslim family of four — a family that was already receiving multiple scholarships, benefits, and assistance directly from me. And yet, they chose to repay that generosity with crime. They betrayed not only me but also SISP, an international humanitarian effort meant to uplift their nation. I came from what many call paradise on Earth to serve the people of Bangladesh, only to be robbed and betrayed by a family in a land that, as I have painfully learned, is now often described by media and observers around the world as a piece of hell on this planet. Shame on the Nation

The pain of betrayal is not mine alone. The actions of Samia and her family disgrace every honest student in Bangladesh. Their crime casts a shadow over the reputation of 170 million people who fight every day for a better life. Instead of lifting the name of their colleges—Government Titumir College and Adamjee Cantonment College—they dragged them through the mud.

The world now sees not the talent of Bangladesh, but the shame caused by one family of scammers. What could have been a story of hope became a lesson in corruption.

A Warning for the Future

This story is a warning. Families like Samia’s wear a mask of innocence, but behind that mask lies greed, fraud, and betrayal. I trusted them fully—provided for their studies, gave them jobs, even helped their parents live with dignity. And in return, the whole family united to destroy everything I had built.

One day, justice will reach them. Their names—Samia Islam Farzana, Freelancer Samia, Jannatul Ferdous Fareha, and their parents—will not be remembered as noble. They will be remembered as a family of four scammers who betrayed their benefactor, their country, and their God.