Arab News

Dhaka speeds up diplomatic efforts to deal with Rohingya crisis

- SHEHAB SUMON

DHAKA: Bangladesh is focusing on strengthen­ing diplomatic efforts to deal with the Rohingya refugee crisis.

The Bangladesh­i envoys of 72 missions serving around the world have been summoned to Dhaka for an envoy conference to be held at the end of November, a senior official at the Foreign Ministry of Bangladesh confirmed to Arab News.

Dhaka is expecting the foreign ministers of China, Japan, Germany, and Sweden to arrive ahead of the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) in Naypyadaw, Myanmar. Two US Senate members are also scheduled to be in Dhaka by Friday midnight for the meeting.

“Bangladesh needs to address the issue through ‘two track diplomacy’ — one is bilateral discussion and the other is internatio­nal. We need to keep the pressure on the Myanmar government by the internatio­nal community,” Ambassador Rashed Ahmed Chowdhury told Arab News.

“With this envoy conference, we can strengthen our effort to sensitize the internatio­nal community on this issue. It will be tough to handle the issue by only focusing on bilateral diplomacy,” the envoy said.

“Through this conference, the ambassador­s and high commission­ers will get the opportunit­y to share experience­s from the field and to receive directives from the government,” said Ambassador Munshi Faej Ahmed, the chairman of the Bangladesh Internatio­nal Institute of Strategic Studies (BIISS).

Bangladesh­i Foreign Minister A.H. Mahmud Ali is scheduled to visit Myanmar on Nov. 19 to attend the ASEM foreign ministers’ meeting. At that time, he is expected to have bilateral talks with Myanmar’s state counselor, Aung San Suu Kyi.

“We expect that in this dialogue both parties will be able to sign an MOU to start the (refugee) repatriati­on process,” said Ambassador Faej to Arab News.

While Dhaka is preparing to strengthen its internatio­nal efforts to keep maximum internatio­nal pressure on Myanmar through the envoy conference, some US senators are visiting Dhaka on Nov. 18-19.

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Willstrom, European Commission’s Federica Mogherini, and US Senators Jeff Markley and Richmond Durbin represent their countries and organizati­ons to witness the plight of Rohingya refugees in the camps of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.

Focusing on the high-profile visit of the foreign delegates, Ambassador Rashed said: “It’s an internatio­nal crisis and we need to solve it with the support of internatio­nal community.”

 ??  ?? A member of Bangladesh Army runs to control the queue of Rohingya refugees who wait outside of an aid distributi­on center to receive aid supplies in the Palong Khali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, on Wednesday. (Reuters)
A member of Bangladesh Army runs to control the queue of Rohingya refugees who wait outside of an aid distributi­on center to receive aid supplies in the Palong Khali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, on Wednesday. (Reuters)

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