Australian police officers have traveled thousands of kilometers to Bangladesh as part of a probe to what is now considered the suspected murder of a mother of Queensland.
Rehana Parvin, 37, was found dead on 12 September 2024 in the South Asian country, after he traveled with her teenage daughter in June to manage her property.
The mother of five was discovered burying next to a septic tank on the ownership of her sister -in -law.
A spokesperson for the Australian Federal Police (AFP) revealed on Saturday that officers had flown to Bangladesh last November.
The visit was part of the research into the 'suspected murder of an Australian citizen in Bangladesh', they said.
The spokesperson said that the probe comes under a part of the Commonwealth Criminal Code that refers to the murder of a citizen or resident outside of Australia.
Daily Mail Australia has contacted the AFP for comment.
The last revelation in the case came in November when it appeared, Mrs. Parvin was admitted to the hospital after a miscarriage on July 3.

Rehana Parvin (photo) was found dead in Bangladesh on 12 September 2024, after having traveled there with her teenage daughter in June to manage her property
Allegedly it was the last time her family heard from her. Her sister Tania Parvin told the ABC that she had been 'four months pregnant '.
Mrs. Parvin was initially treated in Nawabganj Upazila Health Complex, but later transferred to the Dhaka Medical College Hospital, the local police said at the time.
It was reported that the moment her body was discovered, many of the local property she had with her husband Awlad Hossain was in the name of Mrs. Parvin.
Hossain, 48, traveled to Bangladesh on June 29 and returned to Australia on 13 July.
The assistant -superintendent who is responsible for the investigation said that the police had applied for a detention order and pursued the extradition of Mr Hossain from Australia to Bangladesh.
Daily Mail Australia does not suggest that Mr Hossain was involved in the death of his wife, only that the police of Bangladesh applied for an arrest warrant.
Hossain's sister Papia Akhter and Amzad Hossain, a man from the village where Mrs. Parvin grew up, were also arrested.
They acquainted that they have knowledge of the disappearance of Mrs. Parvin, the local authorities said at the time.

Australian federal police officers flew to Bangladesh in November to investigate Mrs. Parvin's 'suspected murder' (share image)
Mrs. Parvin's mother Irean Akter said in September that she “had worked hard to teach my daughter and send her to Australia, where she became a burger.”
“My daughter earned and gained real estate in Australia,” she said.
'I need help, I need the right action. Rehana had five children. Five children lost their mother. '
Although there is no extradition treaty between Bangladesh and Australia, there is a mechanism for people to be extradited between Commonwealth countries, of which both nations are part.