Dates of Usage: ?
Used for the importation of foreign goods. To date, this is the only known design used for the Import stamps. It is not known if it was issued at one time as a complete set of stamps, or if it was issued at two different times with different denominations in each set. The writing in the horizontal panel below the denomination has two different sizes of text, indicating two distinct groups of stamps. The matter is complicated by the fact that the denominations in each group are different. There is also the possibility that there are different printings of the same stamps due to the color variations and perforation patterns. Due to the poor quality of paper and the odd perforation patterns it is likely that some, if not all, of this issue was printed in Russia by Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga, as they resemble the definitive postage stamps they printed for Bangladesh. More research is needed to clarify these issues.

YEAR (?)

Curved panels at top and bottom with vertical panels on the sides. Smaller text in panel under numerical denomination. Poisha is written to the right of the denomination and on the Taka value the Taka sign is to the left of the denomination.
Printer: Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga, USSR (?)
Perf.:
CCM: No
Plate #: No
Earliest and latest dates of documented usage:

DENOMINATIONS

*10p. – olive green
*25p. – olive green
*35.p – light brown
*50p. – light brown
*75p. – light brown
*Tk.1.50 – yellow-orange.

Note the different shades/colors for the 25p. and 50p. stamps. It is not known if these are shade differences or different colors, or if they are errors. There may be shade differences for other values in the set.

YEAR (?)

Curved panels at top and bottom with vertical panels on the sides. Larger text in panel under numerical denomination. Poisha is written to the right of the denomination and on the Taka value the Taka sign is to the left of the denomination.
Printer: Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga, USSR (?)
Perf.:
CCM: No
Plate #: No
Earliest and latest dates of documented usage:

DENOMINATIONS

*20P. – olive green
*30P. – 0live green
*Tk.1 – green
*Tk.2 – red
*Tk.3 – magenta.

Please note that the 50p and 75p sheets are listed with this group of stamps to show the different perforation patterns. All the sheets have horizontal perforations on the right and left side, between the fifth and sixth row of stamps. This is most likely so the sheet could be broken in half easily. The random perforations at the top and bottoms of the stamps are very typical of the postage stamps printed by Mezdonarrodh Niya Knigh of the USSR for Bangladesh in the 1980s. Therefore, it seems likely that they were the printers of these stamps.
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