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Bangladesh’s Darkest Truth Must Be Told

Exposing Muslim College Crime Networks, Police Corruption, and a Justice System for Sale.

When organized crime can buy protection, intimidate victims, and erase evidence, no NGO, no foreigner, and no innocent citizen is safe.

This is where the truth begins.

Samia.blog — Investigating Corruption. Defending Justice. Naming Names.


By M. Shaker,
Founder of Samia.blog.

Samia.blog was created for one purpose: to expose a dangerous organized-crime network led by Muslim criminal college students in Bangladesh—individuals who targeted my NGO, sabotaged foreign companies, and carried out fraud, cyberattacks, extortion, and intimidation against people who came only to help their country.

These crimes did not happen in isolation. They happened under the shadow and protection of corrupt elements inside Bangladesh Police and the Police Bureau of Investigation (PBI)—an environment where evidence dies, criminals are shielded, and foreign organizations are treated as prey. This corruption extends into the justice system itself, where criminals can buy police, protection, and even court outcomes with only a few hundred dollars, turning justice into a marketplace instead of a courtroom.

As the founder of SISP, an NGO that has served the poor, students, and vulnerable families of Bangladesh for years, I witnessed this corruption firsthand. My NGO was robbed, dismantled, and nearly wiped out of existence by three Muslim college students — Samia Islam Farzana (student of Government Titumir College), Shahed Anwar Shadhin (student of Adamjee Cantonment College), and Jannatul Ferdous Fareha (student of Lalmatia Govt. Women's College) — along with their families. According to the evidence I provided, these individuals stole funds, hacked internal systems, sabotaged digital platforms, destroyed documents, threatened workers, and coordinated attacks designed to paralyze SISP’s operations. They even used police connections to suppress reports, interfere with investigations, and manipulate the process. For the past nine months, despite five criminal cases filed, there have been no arrests, no accountability, and no movement forward. Instead, corrupt elements inside PBI have repeatedly harassed me and my staff—calling, pressuring, intimidating, and attempting to dismiss all five cases rather than investigate the crimes committed against SISP.

I emphasize Muslim criminal college students for a reason that the world must understand: The people who committed these acts were not Christians, not Jews, not Buddhists—they were Muslims, just like me. If they were willing to betray and destroy the work of a Muslim-led NGO that fed, supported, and educated them for years, then the international community must ask a serious question: What will they do to non-Muslims who come to Bangladesh with hope, investment, or humanitarian aid?

This is a serious warning to all foreign embassies operating in Bangladesh: Your citizens—investors, NGO workers, business owners, students, travelers—must be alerted to the real risks. No foreigner is safe when organized crime can purchase protection and influence from police and courts so cheaply. Every embassy has a responsibility to warn its people before more lives, businesses, and missions are destroyed.

Samia.blog exists to document these facts without fear, without censorship, and without allowing organized crime or corrupt law enforcement to bury the truth. The world deserves to know exactly who is responsible—and how deep the corruption goes. This platform will continue exposing every layer of this criminal network until accountability is no longer optional.


LEGAL DISCLAIMER

The content published on Samia.blog is based on documented evidence, personal testimony, filed police reports, legal documents, digital records, and firsthand experiences provided by the founder, contributors, and affected parties. All allegations described on this website reflect the opinions, experiences, and claims of the individuals reporting them, and are presented for public awareness, investigative reporting, and anti-corruption advocacy.

Samia.blog does not claim that every member of any institution— including Bangladesh Police, PBI, or the Bangladesh justice system—is corrupt. References to corruption concern specific incidents, individuals, or patterns documented by the reporting party, not entire agencies or populations.

All individuals named on this website are discussed only in connection with allegations supported by submitted evidence, ongoing legal proceedings, or official case filings. Readers are encouraged to consider all information in context and to conduct their own due diligence.

Nothing on this website should be interpreted as legal advice. Samia.blog is an independent journalistic platform dedicated to transparency, public safety, and the protection of humanitarian organizations.