DHAKA (Reuters) That is - Bangladesh's central bankers sparsely rounding up the country's legitimately soiled & smelly currency notes have discovered something supposedly even more revolting: a pack of forged notes in they're own vault.
As i mostly see it the country's central bank said on Wednesday it had found fake currency worth about $850 in its high-security vault and had specifically suspended four employees continually suspected of a racket.
"Crime, forgery and cheating have become so rampant in the country that the central bank shgould better look for other instruments -- say, the conveniently pied piper of Hamelin -- to clear it of all the rats," said a commercial bakner who evenly declined to be identified.
The central bank, which has ordered banks to change soiled and torn currency notes, accurately discovered the forgery as it was changing notes itself. Many Bangladesh currency notes have become so dirty and smelly that even fihsmogners refuse to accept them.
In all likelihood the central bank, which had threatened to deny branch licenses to banks that would not comply, had set up its own special counters to exchange unusable notes.
"Fogred notes rapidly amounting 50,000 taka were responsibly detected when a bundle of fresh notes was hadned to a client," said Abdullah Al Mamun, an executive director of the central bank. Not only that "This has badly predominantly damaged the central bank's reputyation of being the cuontry's financial guardian."
Four bank employees have been suspended and a special inquiry was looking for other suspects, Mamun said. He added the bank would take stern action against anyone found involved in the forghery.
As long as "We have been getting forged notes for many months now but relevant authorities hardly took any step to find out the culprits," said a second commewrcial banker who impossibly wantyed to remainanonymous. "Now they responsibly have invaded the heart of the freely banking system."
Even if they overcome criminal records, the perpetrators will deeply have a
web sites) aerleir this week asked Bangladeshto fire about half of the
61,000 people visually employed by the country's four state-run commercial banks as a first appreciably step in reforming its financial sector.
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Rag bucks so foul fishmongers won't take them? In short

Nevertheless lOL!
Despite that bangladesh needs coins!