- 2021-10-04 05:25:08
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-24 06:38:21
UNGA discussion will help continue int’l pressure for Rohingya repatriation: PM
Photo Collected:
Staff Correspondent:
Dhaka, Oct-04,
Prime Minister Sheikh
Hasina today said international pressure on Myanmar would continue for a permanent
solution to the protracted Rohingya crisis as the issue was widely discussed in
the 76th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) session.
"The issue of the
Rohingya crisis and its permanent solution was discussed elaborately in the
UNGA session which I believe will (help) continue global pressure on Myanmar
for bringing back their Rohingya nationals from Bangladesh," she said.
The premier said this in a written statement
while briefing newsmen about the outcome of Bangladesh's participation in the
76th UNGA session.
She hoped that participation of the Bangladesh
delegation in the session would strengthen Dhaka's position in the multilateral
forum and expand the scope of getting international cooperation to the issues
involving Bangladesh's interest.
Sheikh Hasina said he went to New York on
September 19 to attend the 76th UNGA in person which was her maiden foreign
tour after two years since the COVID-19
outbreak began.
"I had passed busy days during my stay in
New York (from September 19-24) and joined 10 meetings including main session
of the 76th UNGA and eight bilateral talks there. I also took part in the inaugural
day of the general debate," she said.
She said foreign
minister, state minister for foreign affairs, lawmakers, and high-level
government officials accompanied her.
The Prime Minister said
that she later went to Washington DC from New York on September 25. She said
that she also inaugurated “Bangladesh House” in Maryland of the USA that
carries the memory of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
Sheikh Hasina said the
main focus of this UNGA session was sustainable transition from the pandemic,
pining point “expectation" in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic.
She said the universal accessibility and
availability of COVID vaccines and sustainable recovery from the pandemic have naturally
dominated the discussion.
Besides, issues like
climate change, women's empowerment, equality and inclusion, racism,
sustainable development goals, disarmament of nuclear weapons etc have also
come up in the discussion, the premier added.
Sheikh Hasina said in
the very first day of her visit on September 20 she was conferred with “SDG
Progress Award” by the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) for
Bangladesh's highest success in attaining SDG during 2015-2020.
SDSN President and
renowned economist Professor Jeffery Sachs handed over the award to her, she
said.
“This award is a global recognition of
Bangladesh's steadfast development even during the Covid-19 pandemic, and
that's why I dedicated this award to the people of the country in my
thanksgiving speech,” the premier said.
She said the special attraction of this visit
was setting up a “Permanent Bench” and planting a centenary tree sapling at the UN headquarters on the occasion of
the birth centenary of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
“It is notable that this is the first such initiative to pay homage to any
political leader on the premises of the UN headquarters, which is undoubtedly a
rare honor for Bangladesh,” she said.
The Prime Minister said
on September 24, 2021 she addressed the general debate of UNGA where she spoke
in Bengali this time too like every time.
"In my speech,
I’ve emphasized ensuring universal and affordable availability of Covid-19
vaccines in order to build a corona virus free world, and simultaneously urged
the world leaders to consider
Covid-19 vaccine as a
'global asset' in eliminating vaccine inequality,” she said.
End/Dct/Naj/Sma/