The resignation of Tulip Siddiq, the UK’s erstwhile anti-corruption minister, speaks volumes about the current administration under Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Siddiq’s departure comes amid serious allegations of corruption stemming from her native Bangladesh, a situation that ironically clouds her role in combating corruption itself.
Now, the former MP and minister is facing mounting pressure as Bangladeshi authorities have issued an arrest warrant for her.
According to the BBC, the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) in Bangladesh is investigating claims that Siddiq illegally received land amid a broader inquiry into the administration of her aunt, Sheikh Hasina, who was ousted as prime minister last August.
The Hampstead and Highgate MP, who stepped down from her role as economic secretary to the Treasury in January, is now implicated in this warrant along with over 50 others.

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The implications of this situation could be severe, particularly given that the UK maintains an extradition agreement with Bangladesh.
The ACC is scrutinizing allegations that Sheikh Hasina and her family siphoned off as much as £3.9 billion from infrastructure initiatives in Bangladesh.
Bobby Hajjaj, a political rival of Hasina, has accused Siddiq of facilitating a deal with Russia in 2013 that allegedly inflated costs for a new nuclear power plant in Bangladesh.
Siddiq’s legal counsel, Stephenson Harwood, has firmly denied these allegations:
“To clarify, there is absolutely no basis for any charges against her. Furthermore, she has never owned land in Dhaka through illicit means, nor has she influenced any land allocations for herself or others.”
No evidence has been presented by the ACC to back any of the claims against Siddiq, leading us to believe the charges are politically motivated.”
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British Anti-Money Laundering Minister Tulip Siddiq Resigns While Under Investigation for Corruption Tied to Her Aunt’s Toppled Bangladeshi Government