Staff Reporter :
The Anti-Corruption Commission has initiated a case against controversial businessman Moosa Bin Shamsher on charges of forging the registration documents of a car imported under the ‘Carnet de Passage’ facility.
The graft watchdog’s Dhaka-1 Director Mir Md Joynul Abedin started the case on Thursday.
The “Carnet de Passage’ facility allows tourists to enter Bangladesh with their cars without paying duty. But the duty has to be paid if the car is not taken out of the country after the term of the facility expires.
“Four others are also implicated in the case along with Moosa Bin Shamsher,” said ACC spokesperson Pranab Kumar Bhattacharya.
They are BRTA Bhola Circle’s Assistant Director Md Ayub Ansari, the owner of car importing company Auto Define, Md Wahidur Rahman, Moosa’s brother-in-law Md Faruk-uz-Zaman and the British passport holder Farid Nabi, who brought the vehicle using the facility.
The Anti-Corruption Commission has initiated a case against controversial businessman Moosa Bin Shamsher on charges of forging the registration documents of a car imported under the ‘Carnet de Passage’ facility.
The graft watchdog’s Dhaka-1 Director Mir Md Joynul Abedin started the case on Thursday.
The “Carnet de Passage’ facility allows tourists to enter Bangladesh with their cars without paying duty. But the duty has to be paid if the car is not taken out of the country after the term of the facility expires.
“Four others are also implicated in the case along with Moosa Bin Shamsher,” said ACC spokesperson Pranab Kumar Bhattacharya.
They are BRTA Bhola Circle’s Assistant Director Md Ayub Ansari, the owner of car importing company Auto Define, Md Wahidur Rahman, Moosa’s brother-in-law Md Faruk-uz-Zaman and the British passport holder Farid Nabi, who brought the vehicle using the facility.