Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 6th January 2026, 12:11 AM
A Dhaka court has granted a three-day police remand for Iname Hamim, a young man apprehended under suspicious circumstances outside the political office of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) Chairperson in Gulshan. The order was issued on Monday, 5 January, by Dhaka Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Joshita Islam, following a hearing regarding the suspect’s possession of forged identification documents.
The incident occurred in the early hours of Sunday, at approximately 3:40 am. Members of the Chairperson’s Security Force (CSF) spotted Hamim loitering suspiciously near the office on Road 86. Upon being detained and questioned by the police, Hamim’s responses were found to be inconsistent and evasive. A subsequent search of his person led to the discovery of three separate National Identity (NID) cards bearing his photograph but different details, alongside five chequebooks from various banking institutions.
During the remand hearing, the court questioned Hamim on why he carried multiple state-issued identities. The suspect offered a startling explanation, claiming that while one NID was authentic, the other two were fraudulent documents he had procured specifically for the purpose of checking into hotels with his girlfriend. Regarding his presence at the high-security site, he claimed he had merely hoped to catch a glimpse of BNP Acting Chairman Tarique Rahman.
However, the prosecution, led by Public Prosecutor Muhammad Shamsuddoha Suman, dismissed these claims as a facade. The state argued that carrying multiple forged identities and several blank chequebooks at 3:00 am in a sensitive diplomatic zone suggests a far more sinister motive than a simple desire to see a political leader.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Identity Documents | Three NID cards (One authentic, two forged) |
| Financial Instruments | Five chequebooks from different banks |
| Location of Arrest | Road 86, Gulshan (Near BNP Chairperson’s Office) |
| Legal Charges | Fraud and Forgery (Gulshan Police Station) |
| Remand Period | Three Days (Granted on 5 January 2026) |
The investigation officer, Sub-Inspector Sheikh Saiful Islam of Gulshan Police Station, originally sought a seven-day remand to probe potential links to larger criminal networks. The remand application highlighted concerns that, with the 13th National Parliamentary Election approaching, the suspect might have been involved in a conspiracy to commit sabotage or anti-state activities.
The court noted that the use of forged NIDs is a serious offence that compromises national security. The three-day interrogation period is intended to uncover the source of the forged documents and determine whether Hamim was acting as part of a coordinated effort to destabilise the political environment during the sensitive pre-election period.
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