Big companies in Bangladesh: sale of coronavirus certificates

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The hospital owner was arrested for checking out and fleeing in disguise after selling a certificate saying that the migrant staff did not have coronavirus. Most have never been tested.

By Jeffrey Gettleguy and Sameer Yasir

NEW DELHI – The Bangladeshi government arrested a hospital landlord, which they said sold to migrant staff thousands of certificates that appear negative in coronavirus tests, when giant apple tests were never conducted.

Authorities said they sneaked the hospital owner by circulating the border with India disguised as woguy on Wednesday. Police said that when they arrested the landlord, a guy they knew as Mohammad Shahed, with a long criminal record, dressed in a black burka covering him from head to toe.

During the week and a half, Bangladeshi researchers reconstructed what happened: Shahed Hospital in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, sold a fake coronavirus certificate, thousands, at $5 nine, indicating that a patient had a negative result, the Bangladeshi government said.

There is a strong position in the market for those certificates among migrant staff in Bangladesh who are hungry to return to paintings in Europe, doing jobs such as storing grocery stores, bus tables in restaurants or selling bottled water on the streets. Mabig Apple staff in Bangladesh recently travelled to Italy, where they said employers required such a certificate before allowing them to return to paintings.

When Bangladeshi police began to technify Mr. Shahed, he disappeared, the government said. But after nine days of searching, they stayed with him at the border.

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