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    Home > Finance > UK anti-corruption minister resigns over ties to ousted Bangladesh PM
    Finance

    UK anti-corruption minister resigns over ties to ousted Bangladesh PM

    UK anti-corruption minister resigns over ties to ousted Bangladesh PM

    Published by Global Banking and Finance Review

    Posted on January 15, 2025

    Featured image for article about Finance

    By Andrew MacAskill and Catarina Demony

    LONDON (Reuters) - The British minister responsible for financial services and fighting corruption resigned on Tuesday after weeks of questions over her financial ties to her aunt Sheikh Hasina, ousted last year as prime minister of Bangladesh.

    Tulip Siddiq, 42, had repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and Prime Minister Keir Starmer said last week he had full confidence in her.

    The resignation of a second government minister in two months is a blow to Starmer, whose approval ratings have plunged since his Labour Party won a general election in July.

    Siddiq was handed the portfolio for financial services policy after the election, a role that included responsibility for measures against money-laundering.

    In a letter to Starmer, Siddiq said she was resigning because her position was "likely to be a distraction from the work of the government".

    The government's ethics adviser said in his letter to Starmer released at the same time that although Siddiq had not breached the ministerial code of conduct, he found it regrettable she was "not more alert to the potential reputational risks" from her family's close association with Bangladesh.

    "You will want to consider her ongoing responsibilities in the light of this," he said.

    Starmer swiftly appointed Emma Reynolds, who was a pensions minister, to Siddiq's role.

    Hasina, who had ruled Bangladesh since 2009, is being investigated there on suspicion of corruption and money laundering. Hasina and her party deny wrongdoing.

    The press office of Bangladesh’s interim government head, Muhammad Yunus, said in a statement that while Siddiq may not have fully understood the origins of certain assets she enjoyed in London, “she knows now and should seek forgiveness from the people of Bangladesh.”

    The government reaffirmed its commitment to returning stolen funds to the people of Bangladesh, saying investigations were underway with international partners to recover assets tied to corruption.

    Siddiq was named in December as part of Bangladesh's investigation into whether her family were involved in siphoning off funds from Bangladeshi infrastructure projects.

    The anti-corruption commission alleged financial irregularities worth billions of dollars in the awarding of a $12.65 billion nuclear power contract, saying Hasina and Siddiq may have benefited.

    After facing further scrutiny over the use of properties in Britain linked to Hasina and her supporters, Siddiq referred herself to the government's independent ethics adviser.

    Siddiq lived in a north London property given to her family in 2009 by Moin Ghani, a Bangladeshi lawyer who has represented Hasina's government, documents filed with Companies House and the Land Registry show.

    She also acquired a separate property in London in 2004, without paying for it, from a developer linked to the Awami League, Hasina's political party, the Financial Times reported this month.

    Hasina fled Bangladesh after being toppled following weeks of protests.

    Siddiq's departure follows the resignation of British transport minister Louise Haigh late last year. Haigh acknowledged a minor criminal offence before she entered government, relating to a mobile phone that she had wrongly reported stolen.

    (Reporting by Andrew MacAskill, Catarina Demony, Muvija M, Ruma Paul; editing by Kevin Liffey and Stephen Coates)

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