Home ›› 06 Sep 2021 ›› Governance

Jabbar for tough action against digital criminals

Jabbar for tough action against digital criminals
06 Sep 2021 00:00:00 | Update: 06 Sep 2021 01:56:02
Jabbar for tough action against digital criminals

Posts and Telecommunications Minister Mustafa Jabbar has stressed the importance of taking tough action against the digital criminals involved in e-commerce frauds.

Speaking at a webinar titled “E-commerce: Current Situation and Possibilities’’ on Saturday, he said digital criminals should be brought to book at the earliest to curb such crimes.

The minister’s remark came as Nagad, the mobile financial service arm of Bangladesh Post Office, has taken a move recently to suspend some accounts temporarily for suspicious e-commerce transactions and forward the accounts information to law enforcement agencies.

“The way criminals are using technology for digital crimes we should use superior technology to curb those crimes. To prevent digital crimes, we need digital measures as Nagad did,” the minister said.

“If we cannot tackle the digital criminals, then they’ll grow manifold, and such crimes will increase exponentially,” he added.

Head of Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit (BFIU) Abu Hena Mohd Razee Hassan, additional deputy commissioner (ADC) of Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) Md Towhidul Islam, general secretary of the e-Commerce Association of Bangladesh (e-CAB) Muhammad Abdul Wahed Tomal and Nagad chief operating officer Ashish Chakraborty joined the webinar. Nagad chief public affairs officer Solaiman Shukhon moderated the event.

Mustaf Jabbar said the government wants a digital society which is free from criminal activities. “Nagad is a service of the Postal Department. So, we can assure you from the government side that the law enforcement agencies will get the highest level of support from us in dealing with the digital criminals.”

Under the money-laundering law, Abu Hena Mohammad Razee Hassan said, there is a provision of 4 to 12 years of prison sentence and impose fine up to double of the sum of the money laundered.

“Under this law, any organisation or individual is bound to provide relevant information like how much money is transferred to where and to whom. The organisations and institutions also have an obligation to provide any suspicious transaction voluntarily. After analysing such transaction patterns, we send those to law enforcement agencies for necessary action,” he said.

Ashish Chakraborty said they can only share the list of the suspicious account details, but the rest of the work will have to be done by the law enforcement agencies.

×