Bangladesh to seek more Indian support to resolve Rohingya crisis

Bangladesh to seek more Indian support to resolve Rohingya crisis

DHAKA, Feb 6 (NNN-BSS) — Bangladesh will seek more Indian support to
resolve the Rohingya crisis as foreign minister AK Abdul Momen is set to
visit New Delhi in his maiden overseas tour since the Awami League
government was formed for the third consecutive term.

“Among other things, we want to consult with my counterpart about the
early resolution of the Rohingya crisis as it may affect the regional
stability,” the foreign minister told BSS Wednesday.

Momen said he expected enhanced Indian support in resolving the Rohingya crisis.

Bangladesh gave makeshift refuge to over one million Rohingya people on
humanitarian ground as they fled their homeland in Myanmar to evade a brutal military crackdown.

“I am visiting India in my maiden foreign tour to honour our great neighbor, the world’s greatest democracy,” the foreign minister said.

Momen acknowledged that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was the first foreign leader to greet his Bangladesh counterpart Sheikh Hasina soon after the Dec 30 election results were announced while “we always found them beside us in our crises.”

“We have some other issues as neighbours everywhere in the world have
issues, but by now we amicably resolved several of them like the major
maritime boundary and the land boundary and expect the others to be solved as well since we now enjoy the warmest ever relations,” he said.

Dr Momen did not elaborate the expected deals with India during the tour
but officials said the two countries could ink five memorandums of
understanding (MoUs).

“The two sides so far agreed to sign three MoUs and they could reach a
consensus on another two by tomorrow,” an official of the Bangladesh High
Commission in Delhi told BSS on Tuesday.

Officials concerned in the mission said one of the three MoUs involved
cooperation of the two countries in graft investigation while the two others
were over TV broadcasting and medicinal plants.

They said Bangladesh’s Anti Corruption Commission (ACC) and India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) were expected to sign the first MoU, state-run Bangladesh Television (BTV) and Prasar Bharti of India the second and the two health ministries would ink the third one.

A refugee Rohingya girl carries a chicken at makeshift market inside the Rohingya refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, 03 August 2018. Photo courtesy Bernama images

Momen is set to arrive in the Indian capital Wednesday night to attend the 5th India-Bangladesh Joint Consultative Commission (JCC) meeting on Friday.

The foreign minister will lead a high level delegation comprising
secretaries of different ministries and concerned departmental chiefs
concerning the JCC in the meeting with his Indian counterpart Sushma Swaraj, to be accompanied by concerned officials of her country.

Officials in Dhaka said entire gamut of bilateral relations ranging from
trade and investment, security cooperation, connectivity, border management, defence cooperation, energy, shipping, and people-to-people exchanges were expected to come up for discussion in the JCC meet.

Momen is also scheduled to call on Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday morning prior to joining the JCC meet.

Later, he will meet former Indian President Pranab Mukherjee at the
latter’s residence in New Delhi and join a lunch to be hosted by Swaraj in
his honour on Friday.

India’s union State Minister for Housing and Urban Affairs Hardeep Singh
Puri will also host a dinner for him on Thursday.

Bangladesh High Commission in New Delhi will host a dinner on Friday in
honour of the minister and his delegation.

Wrapping up his three-day visit, the Bangladesh foreign minister will leave
New Delhi for Dhaka on Saturday morning.

The last JCC meet was held in Dhaka on Oct 22-23, 2017 when Sushma
Swaraj led the Indian delegation. — NNN-BSS

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