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Photo: Drug dealer Niyamul Karim Tipu buys the coins from vegetable merchant Khabir.
The managing director of a Dhaka-based pharmaceutical company bought all the coins from Khairul Islam Khabir, a vegetable merchant from Mohammadpur in Magura, who was having trouble with the six mana coins he had accumulated. He bought a total of 56 thousand taka coins from Khabir for one lakh of rupees.
On Wednesday afternoon (October 26), Niyamul Karim, Managing Director of Mika Pharma Care Limited in Dhanmondi, Dhaka, went home to Jangalia village in upazila and bought all the coins from Tipu Khabir.
Earlier, when news about Khabir’s six-pound coin was published in various media, the Mohammadpur Sadar Sonali Bank branch began depositing Tk 1,000 into his account every day on the instructions of the higher authorities. So far you have deposited four thousand rupees. Later, news about the Khabir currency was republished.
Khabir has been depositing Tk 60,000 coins weighing 25 paise, 50 paise, 1 taka and 2 taka for about 10 years for 10 years. You are in trouble because there is no transaction of these coins. Even after depositing Tk 4,000 in the bank, Khabir had another Tk 57,000 in coins.
Later, when the news spread to different places, the Dhaka drug lord Niyamul Karim Tipu went to Khabir’s house on Wednesday afternoon and bought the coins.
Mohammadpur UNO Ramananda Pal, Managing Director of Mika Pharma Care Limited Dhanmondi in Dhaka Niyamul Karim Tipu and Director of Aminur Rahman College in Mohammadpur Sadar and President of Press Club Biplob Reza Biko were present at Khabir’s home.
Niyamul Karim Tipu, Managing Director of Mika Pharma Care Limited in Dhanmondi, Dhaka, said he had bought the coins at almost double the price to back the troubled small trader after seeing reports in various media outlets.
He said that a certain amount of these coins will be deposited in the land bank and distributed to poor children. Through this you will try to develop the habit of saving between them.
Mohammadpur UNO Ramananda Pal said, “We made arrangements to deposit Khabir’s coins in the bank.” The matter was timely and troublesome. Poor merchants benefited greatly by getting almost double the money in exchange for coins.
Khairul Islam Khabir wept with joy and said: ‘I couldn’t sleep at night with six manas of retail money. Why did you save so much money? Everyone was afraid to take you. All the capital of my business went with this money. For the first time in my life, I got a lakh of rupees together. I have benefited a lot. ‘
It should be noted that for 10 years, twenty-five paisa, fifty paisa, one taka and two taka six manas of coins (coins) were deposited in the small merchant Khabir. Although the government has not canceled these coin transactions, buyers no longer want to accept them. He got into trouble with this huge amount of coins that became practically obsolete.
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