"The cabinet took a decision that NBR (National Board of Revenue) and the Banking Division of Bangladesh Bank may file separate cases against him (Yunus)," Cabinet Secretary Musharraf Hossain Bhuiyan told reporters after a cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.
He said the cabinet also thought that Yunus breached the Grameen Bank Ordinance by transferring its funds to an affiliate organisation of the micro lending agency while it was authorised only to lend it to the landless people alongside enjoying tax relief on his personal income in an improper way being a "public servant".
Bhuiyan, however, did not explain how Yunus was treated as a government or public servant but officials said he should be regarded as a government official for his appointment as the managing director and CEO of the Grameen, in which the government has stake.
The 73-year-old economist is on a protracted row with the government due to obscure reasons and the wrangle apparently resurfaced last month when in a surprise move he put his weight behind main opposition BNP's demands over the electoral system.
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The NBR alleged Yunus brought home foreign currencies in honorariums, awards and royalties from foreign sources without "government permission" between 2005 and 2011, as the CEO of the Grameen Bank, in which the government has a minor stake.
NBR, however, did not find any evidence that Yunus obtained tax exemption facility illegally on his income from foreign sources as a wage earner though he did not have the government's consent for accepting the foreign awards and money.
But Bhuiyan said under the law, the Grameen Bank alone might enjoy tax exemption, not other associate bodies or Yunus as a person and "public servant" as Grameen's CEO and thus he was accused of tax exemptions.
Legal experts, however, said according to Bangladesh's tax laws, if a Bangladeshi remits his personal income through formal banking channels, the income is tax-free, a fact also acknowledged by the NBR in its report to the cabinet.
Yunus, who earned the repute for Bangladesh as the home of micro credit with his experiment of poor men's banking, won the Nobel Peace Prize along with the Grameen in 2006.