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== Investigation ==
== Investigation ==
An investigation has been initiated at the request of [[Stephen Timms]], minister of the [[Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform]]. In the early hours of [[6 July]] [[2007]], the [[Metropolitan Police]] seized documents and computers from the First Solution head offices in [[London]].
An investigation has been initiated at the request of [[Stephen Timms]], minister of the [[Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform]]. In the early hours of [[6 July]] [[2007]], the [[Metropolitan Police]] seized documents and computers from the First Solution head offices in [[London]]. These materials have now been requisitioned by the Companies Investigation Branch of the [[BERR]] (formerly [[DTI]])


== Campaigns ==
== Campaigns ==

Revision as of 22:11, 26 July 2007

First Solution Money Transfer
Company typePrivate
IndustryForeign exchange market
Founded2004
Defunct2007
Headquarters,
Number of locations
41 branches, 100+ agents
Key people
Dr Fazal Mahmoud (Chairman)
Gulam Rabbani Rumi (Director)
Shah Mohammad Abdul Hadi (Director)
Websitewww.first-solution.co.uk

First Solution Money Transfer was a UK based private limited company which provided a money transfer service, providing expatriates the facilities to transfer money back to their family in Bangladesh.

In June 2007, the company went into liquidation owing nearly GB£2  million pounds to the public, the majority of whom were from the Sylhet region of Bangladesh.

Campaigns organised by various community leaders and the local Member of Parliament has led to investigations of the collapse by the Metropolitan Police and a review of this industry by the government. Tighter regulation in this sector is expected to be introduced by 2009. The government has also indicated support for the setup of a crisis fund to compensate the victims.

History

Company structure

First Solution Money Transfer had its headquarters at the London Muslim Centre in East London with another prominent office in Brick Lane. Additional branches and affiliated agents were dotted around the major towns and cities of the UK with a few in the rest of Europe.

Growth: The company achieved a staggering growth since its inception in July 2004, increasing its turnover from 4 million GBP to aproximately 87 million GBP year ending 2007

Bankruptcy

The company went into liquidation in June 2007 owning, according to the company directors, GB£1.7 million pounds to the public who had used its money transfer service in the preceding 2-3 months.[1]

The scandal sent shockwaves through the Bangladesh money transfer industry in the UK. Measures are being put in place by the Government of Bangladesh to ensure a similar situation does not occur again.

The UK government will also bring in tighter regulation to this sector but these are not expected to be in place until 2009.[2][3]

Bangladesh Bank

The Bangladesh Bank governor stated that First Solution was not given a license by the Bangladesh Bank.[4] However, First Solution is listed on the Bangladesh Bank's website as having agreements with a number of banks in Bangladesh through which it was permitted to remit money into the country.[5]

However, there are also a number of companies in the UK provided remittance facilities to Bangladesh which do not have the approval of Bangladesh Bank nor are they listed in the UK section of Bangladesh Bank's inward remittance providers list.[6]

In an article in the East London Advertiser,[7] Dr. Roger Ballard of the Centre for Applied South Asian Studies at the University of Manchester suggests that First Solution may well have been the first fruits of efforts by the UK's Department for International Development (DFID) to replace 'informal' community-based value transfer networks with 'more reliable' formal sector initiatives. DFID made a GB£7.5 million grant to the Bank of Bangladesh to achieve just that.[8]

But although their publicly announced reason for doing so was to provide migrants with cheaper and more reliable services, the underling subtext of such initiatives - also strongly backed by the World Bank and the US Treasury - was to prevent these 'informal' 'underground' networks being used by terrorists and drugs smugglers - even though there was little or no evidence that hawala networks were actually being used for such purposes. Most informed commentators concluded that such 'informal' networks provided migrant workers with a service which was easier to access, cheaper, swifter, and if anything even more reliable than those provided by the banks and other former sector agencies.[9]

DFID thought otherwise. First Solution was only too ready to agree, and carefully conformed with the necessary regulatory requirements - which were all about countering Terrorist finance and Anti-money laundering. The regulations made no reference to steps to be taken to ensure financial reliability. In the past there had been no need to do so. Trust-based networks which grew out of local communities had been extremely reliable.

However, First Solution was a totally different kind of beast. It was organised by the top down, had the blessings of the Bangladesh Bank, and perhaps of DFID as well (although they have so far kept their heads well below the parapet). But First Solution was a limited company: it wasn't grounded in networks of mutual trust or coalitions of reciprocity;[10] and as a limited company it operated on the principle of caveat emptor - buyer beware. That's the capitalist logic of formality.

Cause of downfall

It is still unclear if the situation had been exacerbated as a result of media pressure causing thousands of people to demand immediate refunds effectively causing a cashflow crisis at the company and forcing it to call in liquidators. Investigation is currently ongoing to determine the full extent of the problem and whether the company was involved in fraudulent activities or undertook risky speculative business in the currency market.

In a press statement displayed on the company's website, the directors stated that Bangla TV, a UK-based Bengali language satellite TV channel, had been irresponsible in showing angry public opinion calling for the directors and their families to be "pursued" and not to rest until they were shown "naked in the street". The directors have also stated that Bangla TV had caused panic among the community by falsely stating that the company had gone bankrupt when it hadn't on 25 June 2007. The company, therefore, had no choice but to call in liquidators as the investment and cash-injection it was seeking at the time had fallen through as a direct result of these misrepresentations by Bangla TV.[11]

In an e-mail interview given to the E-Bangladesh news site, the directors re-iterated their views on the cause of the downfall.[12]

Investigation

An investigation has been initiated at the request of Stephen Timms, minister of the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform. In the early hours of 6 July 2007, the Metropolitan Police seized documents and computers from the First Solution head offices in London. These materials have now been requisitioned by the Companies Investigation Branch of the BERR (formerly DTI)

Campaigns

On 8 July 2007, a rally was held at Altab Ali Park where George Galloway called on the government to compensate the victims for the money they lost in this scandal.

On 10 July 2007, George Galloway held a meeting with Kitty Ussher (Economic Secretary to the Treasury) and called on the government to setup a Farepak-style crisis fund to compensate the victims. The minister said there would be support for such a fund from the government and a statement would be made to parliament shortly on the First Solution crisis.[13]

Hundreds of people demonstrated and lobbied MPs outside the houses of parliament on 11 July 2007. The government has confirmed it is planning a rescue package to compensate the victims although the government itself would not be donating any money into the fund.[3] The issue was debated in Parliament on 18 July 2007.[14]

People who have lost money with First Solution have until the 26 July 2007 to register their interest with the liquidators or the First Solution Creditors Group.[15] The liquidators are expected to hold their first meeting on 9 August 2007 where the victims will be able to vote on whether to keep them or appoint a different firm to oversee the insolvency.

References

See also

Foreign exchange spot trading

External links