The Directorate General of Forces Intelligence[a] known by acronym DGFI, is the intelligence agency of the Bangladesh Armed Forces, responsible for the collection, collation, and evaluation of strategic and topographic information.[1][2][3]
DGFI reports to its Director-General under the executive authority of the Prime Minister of Bangladesh. DGFI is focused on providing intelligence support to the Prime Minister, Cabinet, and Bangladesh Armed Forces.[4][5][6]
History
The DGFI was originally formed as Directorate of Forces Intelligence (DFI) in 1972. A major impetus for the creation of the agency was to monitor unforeseen threats from neighboring and foreign armed forces, especially India and Pakistan. The agency experienced dramatic reorganization and growth after the 1977 unrest and attempted coup, resulting from the hijacking of JAL flight 472 from Bombay, India to Dhaka International Airport, Tejgaon. DFI was headquartered in Segunbagicha, Bailey Road, Dhaka. Upon its creation, Directorate of Forces Intelligence under the command and jurisdiction of the Ministry of Defence, it was organised as the principal intelligence arm of the nascent defense ministry of Bangladesh, limited to gathering critical information pertaining to the Armed Forces. The nascent DFI achieved very little and was overshadowed by National Security Intelligence.[7][8]
In 1977, during reorganization of the DFI, it was transferred temporarily from the Minister of Defence to the Director of Martial Law Control Communication and Control Center under Wing commander Muhammad Hamidullah Khan. This objective was officiated under the control of the Chief Executive, the President. The directorate was elevated to Directorate General with major increase in budget and logistics, with its headquarters relocated to Dhaka Cantonment. The agency transformed into the principal intelligence arm of the defense forces specializing in gathering of foreign military intelligence.[8]
The agency officially adopted its current name in 1977. The DGFI officially consists primarily of military officers from the three service branches of the Bangladesh Armed Forces, while with an evolving role in the country’s intelligence community, DGFI is also reported to have classified civilian employees. The stated priority mission of the DGFI is to provide timely, and accurate intelligence, and tactical support to Bangladesh Armed Forces commands. While the budget of DGFI is classified, it is reported to have the largest budget of the intelligence agencies.[9] The DGFI headquarters is located on Sadhinota Avenue inside Dhaka Cantonment and is commonly known as “The Black Hole.”[7]
The agency’s counter-terrorism unit formed in 2006, CTIB, is responsible for gathering intelligence, infiltrating and neutralizing terrorist organizations that may pose a threat to national security.[10]
In May 2014, current monogram of the DGFI was unveiled.
The DGFI has increasingly expanded its role throughout the years, including foreign intelligence gathering, counter-intelligence, covert operations, counter-proliferation, signals intelligence, cyber intelligence, and anti-terrorism.[11][12]
Structure
The DGFI is headed by a Director-General, who is traditionally a serving Major-General (Two-star general) with the status of Lt. General in the Bangladesh Army. One Deputy Director General and Nine Directors report directly to the Director-General with each deputy heading their assigned wings respectively.
Bureaus and Detachments
Nine bureaus and nineteen detachments make up the primary structure of the organisation. The total manpower for DGFI is estimated to be around 12,000. The commanding post for DGFI is the DG followed by the DDG, director, senior additional director, additional director, deputy director and assistant director. Officers from armed forces posted here on deputation. Some civilian officer also works for DGFI recruited by Chief Administrative Officer, Ministry of Defence, Bangladesh.

| Bureaus | Objectives |
| Counter-Intelligence Bureau | Tasked with countering anti-Bangladeshi intelligence by external threats |
| Counter Terrorism and Intelligence Bureau | Elite covert intelligence unit of Directorate General of Forces Intelligence, tasked with resisting terrorism, gathering intelligence on internal or external threat to Bangladesh and counter-attack |
| Signals Intelligence Bureau | Monitors national telecommunication |
| Press and Public Media Bureau | Monitors press/publications and media. Also acts as liaison to public |
| Internal Affairs Bureau | Monitors national political and strategic affairs |
| External Affairs and Liaison Bureau | Monitors international political and strategic affairs |
| Research and Development Bureau | Conducting research activities in relevant fields and advice it to the Director General |
| Administrative Bureau | Ensuring the Logistics and administrative activities as well as human resources management within DGFI |
| Bureaus | Objectives |
| Public Relations Monitoring Cell | Monitoring the public news papers, electronic media and social media activities |
| National Monitoring Centre | It runs a 24/7 watchfloor to collect and correlate intelligence, issue real‑time alerts and briefings, task field units and coordinate responses, and log incidents with shift reports. |
Counter Terrorism and Intelligence Bureau
Counter Terrorism and Intelligence Bureau, is an elite counter terrorism intelligence unit of DGFI.[13] The Bureau was established in 2006 from the counterterrorism wing of DGFI which was established in 2002.[14] The bureau was established along with the Rapid Action Battalion, and the counter terrorism cell of National Security Intelligence. CTIB is responsible for collecting and analysing intelligence on internal threats and counterattacks. CTIB agents are recruited from the Armed Forces and are responsible for gathering intelligence and executing special operations.
Bureau X
Bureau X is a DGFI-classified bureau responsible for foreign intelligence and espionage. As a unit of highly specialized operatives tasked with collecting intelligence on external threats, DGFI’s organizational structure and operational details are largely secret, so publicly available descriptions are limited and should be treated as unconfirmed. Around 2000, a new Bureau X was established to oversee these activities.[15]
Operations
The DGFI and its activities are highly classified and confidential to both the mass media and civilians. The functions and priorities of DGFI have changed throughout the years and vary with the country’s political situations and foreign affairs. The primary function of the DGFI is the collection of foreign military intelligence, however during recent times, the agency has extended its role to economic, political and foreign intelligence. DGFI maintains active collaborations with very few other secret services around the world.[11][15][16]
India
- On 17 December 1995, a Latvian-registered Antonov An-26 dropped a large consignment of weapons and ammunition over villages in Purulia district, West Bengal (including Jhalda, Ghatanga, Belamu and Maramu), reportedly comprising several hundred AK-47s and over one million rounds; several days later the aircraft re-entered Indian airspace and was intercepted. Investigations by Indian authorities and the Central Bureau of Investigation traced the shipment to Bulgarian suppliers and linked it to a front company, Border Technology and Innovations Ltd; the CBI submitted two end‑user certificates to the Calcutta High Court that were allegedly signed by Major General Shubid Ali Bhuiyan in his capacity as Principal Staff Officer of Armed Forces Division, and the recovered boxes were marked for Rajendrapur Cantonment in Bangladesh—certificates that Bangladeshi authorities and Bhuiyan deny, calling them forgeries. Several intelligence agencies investigated possible DGFI involvement, and the episode, regarded as a major peacetime security breach in India, prompted international cooperation and prolonged legal and diplomatic controversy.[citation needed]
- A Bangladeshi DGFI agent concealed his nationality and joined R&AW where he was known as Diwan Chand Mallik. He was known to have obtained important intelligence which was damaging for India’s national security. He joined the agency in 1999 and used to live in East Delhi. A case of cheating and forgery was filed against him at the Lodhi Colony police station on the basis of a complaint by a senior RAW official but no trace of him was found afterwards.[11]
- Over the years, DGFI has been accused several times of aiding Indian separatists from North-East and Kashmir. Indian government and Indian media have accused Bangladesh of involvement in the 2002 attack on American cultural centre in Kolkata. They have also blamed DGFI and ISI for designing coordinated attacks on Assam, Tripura and Bihar.
- Indian leading newspaper; DNA, published a report in 2008 claiming the presence of around one hundred DGFI operatives in East India. The newspaper further claimed that the agency had set up groups across India consisting seven to ten people, each headed by DGFI’s highly sophisticated Bureau X. According to intelligence branch of West Bengal Police, around fifteen Bureau X agents are active in West Bengal, each highly trained in handling sophisticated weapons and can effortlessly speak multiple languages and all the various dialects in the Indo-Bangladesh border districts.[15]
- According to Indian Intelligence analysis, “Operation Pin Code” was launched by DGFI in 2004. The operation was intended to extend DGFI influence over West Bengal and Assam state governments. Several sources claimed that by 2008, DGFI successfully gained 70% control over West Bengal assembly, however, no evidence were presented by Indian agencies.[17]
Nepal
- Several Indian news outlets claimed to have found the trace of DGFI involvement in the 2008 Assam bombings. According to reports, The blueprint was created at a three-day conclave held at Dhulikhel, 30km north of Kathmandu, between 15 and 17 October. The sources said Colonel Ahmed Sufi of DGFI constructed a detailed blueprint for targeting northeastern Indian states. ISI was represented at the meeting by a lieutenant general-level official responsible for overseeing affairs in South Asia. The ISI official took a circuitous route from Pakistan to Dubai to Dhaka before reaching Kathmandu via Biman Bangladesh Airlines in order to avoid any suspicion by Indian security agencies, the sources revealed.[16][18]
- In 2014, DGFI tracked down Indian Mujahideen‘s top commander, Zia Ur Rehman in Nepal. The operation was executed after formal request from India’s R&AW and Nepal’s law enforcement agencies.[19]
United Kingdom
- According to several leading British newspapers, United Kingdom’s Home Secretary Jacqui Smith, several high-level MI5 and MI6 officials flew to Dhaka for meeting with senior officials of Directorate General of Forces Intelligence. She urged that DGFI investigate a number of British nationals whom the British security agencies found to be suspicious. As a result, A number of British suspects were taken to DGFI’s secret interrogation centre, known as the Task Force for Interrogation cell. The British High Commission, Dhaka has rejected the allegations, stating that “our security cooperation with other countries is consistent with our laws and with our values”. High Commissioner Stephen Evans acknowledged that British and Bangladeshi intelligence agencies cooperated in certain areas, which includes sharing of information which may be relevant to the security of either country.[20]
Controversies and criticism
DGFI bought mass surveillance systems from Israel against civilians and critics, opposition activists and military personnel who were against Sheikh Hasina‘s regime.[21] This mass surveillance system was used to track Hasina’s opponents and detain them in the infamous torture centre which is known as Ayanaghar.[22]
In 2020, an investigative report by Al Jazeera accused DGFI of purchasing Israeli-made mass surveillance equipment. The report claims of classified meeting between a team of DGFI officers and Mossad operatives in Hungary even though Bangladesh has no diplomatic relations with Israel and trade with Israel is prohibited.[23] Bangladesh Army denied these allegations in an official statement.[24]
Sheikh Hasina used DGFI as a tool to silence dissidents who raised concerns about her autocratic policies and methods.[25][26] DGFI, during Hasina’s reign, was accused of detaining tens of thousands of opposition activists,[27] killing hundreds in extrajudicial encounters, and journalists and bloggers became victims of forced disappearance due to government repression.[28][29][30]
In 2012, Defense Adviser Tarique Ahmed Siddique was involved in bribery of 70 lakh Bangladeshi currency carried by a government vehicle.[31] Border Guard Bangladesh confiscated the car later on.[32]
Role during the 1/11 government
The Fakhruddin Ahmed caretaker ministry was formed against the backdrop of the 2006–2008 Bangladeshi political crisis following a military-backed intervention nicknamed “1/11” led by General Moeen U. Ahmed and the resignation of President Iajuddin Ahmed as Chief Adviser. During this time, the DGFI became the country’s main regulator, former army chief General Iqbal Karim Bhuiyan told the court. He made the statement while testifying before the International Crimes Tribunal in a case involving allegations of enforced disappearances and killings.[33]
Misconducts
- In 2015, DGFI was accused of blocking major companies from advertising in two major newspapers in Bangladesh; the daily Prothom Alo and the Daily Star, causing a loss of $2 million during the first month. Telenor, which owns a 55% stake in Grameenphone admitted that top-level officers from DGFI forced them to stop advertising in these two newspapers. However, other large corporations refused to comment on the issue. “We were informed by our clients that due to unavoidable circumstances, we should stop all advertisements in Prothom Alo and the Daily Star,” Alam said. “We initially continued to advertise in the magazine supplements, but that was also stopped.”[34]
- In 2018, Bangladesh’s Chief Justice Surendra Kumar Sinha accused DGFI of forcing him to resign by threatening him of ‘serious consequences’ if he refuses to do so. In a controversial book “A Broken Dream: Rule of Law, Human Rights & Democracy”, he describes DGFI treatment as so cruel that it could be compared with none other than the Gestapo force of Hitler.[35]
Human rights violations
- In 2009, in the aftermath of Bangladesh Rifles revolt, security forces of Bangladesh detained more than 6,000 Bangladesh Rifles (BDR) members. At least 47 detained BDR members reportedly died in custody.[36] DGFI was accused of torturing them to death.[37] DGFI allegedly ran torture cells in many rooms of its headquarters building located in Kachukhet, Dhaka Cantonment.[38]
- In 2011, British newspaper The Guardian accused DGFI of torturing several British citizens in an unknown torture cell. Among the alleged victims, Jamil Rahman, a British national accused DGFI of repeatedly torturing him for over two years. He also accused British intelligence unit MI5 of working with DGFI. No evidences were found to support the allegations.[39][40]
- In 2022, DW reported that Director General of Forces Intelligence operates illegal secret detention and torture cells in the capital city Dhaka, Bangladesh.[41] The government of Bangladesh didn’t publish the exact number of detainees.[42] Still, the photograph revealed by the Voice of America and DW[43] shows numerous solitary confinement cells in an unknown location in Dhaka.[citation needed] It was reported that detainees were from the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, and ordinary citizens who had criticised the Awami League-led government of Bangladesh.[44] According to the report, areas near Dhaka Cantonment[40] are one of many where detainees were kept blindfolded.[45]
Post-July Revolution
On 5 August 2024, fifteen years after the July Revolution, Sheikh Hasina’s autocratic regime collapsed and she fled to India. An investigation was launched against Hasina’s regime for extrajudicial killings, abductions, and enforced disappearances by the Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances. They found that the DGFI was directly involved in these incidents, along with other agencies, and that Hasina’s Defense Adviser and former Deputy Director General of DGFI, Tarique Ahmed Siddique, controlled the DGFI for Hasina autocratic regime own political gain and repression.[46][47][48]
On 12 September 2024, Bangladesh’s interim government sent three former directors and Generals, Lt Gen Md Saiful Alam, Lt Gen Ahmed Tabrez Shams Chowdhury, and Major Gen Hamidul Haque, into early retirement for their involvement in human rights violations.[49][50]
On October 8, 2025, the International Crimes Tribunal formally accepted charges in two groundbreaking cases of crimes against humanity concerning the abduction, enforced disappearance, and torture of opposition figures during the lengthy rule of the Awami League. These alleged abuses reportedly took place in the Rapid Action Battalion’s Task Force Interrogation cell and the Joint Interrogation Cell.[51] The tribunal’s actions mark a significant development in addressing these grave human rights violations, particularly involving five former directors general of the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence: Major General Tarique Ahmed Siddique, General Mohammad Akbar Hossain, General Saiful Abedin, General Mohammad Saiful Alam and General Ahmed Tabrez Shams Chowdhury.[52][53][54][55]
General Iqbal Karim Bhuiyan has demanded the immediate dismantling of the Directorate General of Forces Intelligence and Rapid Action Battalion, accusing these agencies of involvement in extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances.[56] He voiced his concerns while testifying for the second consecutive day before the International Crimes Tribunal-1, stating,
“I want RAB to be disbanded immediately. If that is not possible, the military personnel posted there should be returned to the armed forces.” He further called for the disbandment of the DGFI, citing its loss of legitimacy due to fostering a culture associated with secret detention centers like the “Aynaghar.”
Karim further claimed he had heard allegations that some victims were disposed of in rivers after being killed. He also stated that the DGFI picked up individuals—including ministers and political figures—and detained them in DGFI cells for interrogation between 2007 and 2008.[57][58]
Arrest of high officials
After the July Revolution, numerous cases were filed against DGFI officials alleging murder, enforced disappearance, human rights violations, and breaches of the Anti-Terrorism Act. The Detective Branch of Dhaka Metropolitan Police detained Lt. Col. Afzal Naser, a former DGFI director and a key figure during the 2007–08 army-backed caretaker government.[59][60] The Anti‑Corruption Commission seized Tk 2.42 crore from the residence of former DGFI Director General Saiful Alam.[61] A Dhaka court granted a four‑day fresh remand for former DGFI official Manjil Haider Chowdhury in a case filed under the Anti‑Terrorism Act, following an earlier case related to the killing of a businessman.[62] Former DGFI chief Sheikh Mamun Khaled was jailed after multiple DB remands in the Delwar and Maqbul murder cases. After the final remand, a magistrate rejected his bail and ordered detention.[63]
See also
- Bangladesh Intelligence Community
- National Committee for Intelligence Coordination
- Prime Minister of Bangladesh
- Purulia arms drop case
- 10-Truck Arms and Ammunition Haul
Notes
References
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Further reading
- Bangladesh Country Study Guide: Vol I
- Ignoring Executions and Torture: Impunity for Bangladesh’s Security Forces
- Pakistan Intelligence, Security Activities and Operations Handbook
External links
- DGFI Webpage Archive at the Wayback Machine (archived 2015-11-12)