The Most Devastating Decision: SISP Founder Withdraws “Operation Bangladesh” Following Fraud, Institutional Corruption, and the Destruction of a Historic Humanitarian Mission
January 1, 2026


In what the founder has described as the most painful and consequential decision of his humanitarian life, Shaker International Scholarship Programs (SISP) has officially withdrawn its largest humanitarian initiative — Operation Bangladesh — from the country it was originally designed to serve.
Operation Bangladesh was a large-scale direct supplemental assistance framework, built to relieve a historic burden from the Government of Bangladesh by supporting millions of vulnerable citizens. It was a national-level humanitarian ecosystem, created entirely through private funding and years of personal sacrifice by the founder.
The project was designed to provide structured humanitarian support to:
- Poor families in villages and cities
- Students facing hardship
- Single mothers
- Orphans
- People with disabilities
- Elderly individuals
- Teachers and education workers
- Frontline public servants, including law enforcement
However, SISP has withdrawn Operation Bangladesh for two unavoidable and decisive reasons.
A Mission Destroyed by Fraud and Sabotage
The project was severely damaged and effectively destroyed during its early implementation phase. Three individuals — Samia Islam Farzana (student of Government Titumir College), Shahed Anwar Shadhin (student of Adamjee Cantonment College), and Jannatul Ferdous Fareha (student of Lalmatia Govt. Women's College) — trusted, supported, educated, and treated like family by SISP, are now at the center of the SISP Bangladesh fraud case.
Through fraud, theft of organizational funds and equipment, and months of deliberate sabotage, the pilot stage of Operation Bangladesh was dismantled:
- Seed funding was taken
- Testing infrastructure was lost
- Operational foundations were destroyed
As a result, the humanitarian mission must now be rebuilt entirely from the ground up, requiring new resources, new pilots, and extensive restructuring.
Institutional Corruption and Failure of Justice
Despite extensive evidence — including witnesses, financial records, communications, documents, and official findings — the SISP justice case in Bangladesh has faced prolonged delays:
- No timely arrests
- No recovery of stolen assets
- No accountability proportional to the damage caused
This growing nonprofit fraud investigation has raised serious concerns about institutional corruption and systemic protection of wrongdoing. Humanitarian service requires transparency, accountability, and legal integrity. Without these foundations, continuing such a mission becomes impossible.
A Mission Born From Love — Now Forced Into Exile
The founder of SISP, an Iranian-American Muslim residing in Hawaii, came to Bangladesh with sincere love and a belief that serving humanity is serving God. The organization was built not with government funds or institutional donations, but with the founder’s personal savings and years of hard work.
Those treated better than family — provided jobs, scholarships, financial assistance, and full support — committed the deepest betrayal.
Operation Bangladesh Will Rise in Other Nations
SISP has begun engaging leadership in other countries to launch the Operation Bangladesh framework internationally. When it succeeds elsewhere, the world will ask why a project called Operation Bangladesh is not in Bangladesh. At that moment, the founder has pledged to tell the full truth.
What was lost was not just a nonprofit initiative — it was a humanitarian system capable of supporting millions.
A Consequence That Will Be Remembered
History will record that a historic humanitarian opportunity
was destroyed not by lack of resources —
but by corruption.
SISP Continues Supporting Those Already Promised
Despite withdrawing Operation Bangladesh from the country,
SISP remains committed to the people it already pledged to support.
Scholarships remain active.
Monthly financial assistance continues.
Humanitarian commitments are being honored.


