Published: 2018-08-09 01:07:11.0 BdST Updated: 2018-08-09 01:07:11.0 BdST
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Foreign Minister AH
Mahmood Ali speaks at a news briefing in Dhaka on Sunday on President Md Abdul
Hamid joining a special summit of the OIC in Istanbul on Dec 13 on US President
Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Photo: asif mahmud
ove
Foreign Minister Abul
Hassan Mahmood Ali will start his three-day Myanmar visit on Thursday to see
the preparations there for the return of Rohingya refugees.
He left Dhaka on
Wednesday night in a Singapore Airways plane, one of his aides said.
The foreign ministry
earlier said Mahmood Ali will see the accommodation facilities, particularly
installation of pre-fabricated houses for repatriation of the Rohingyas.
Bangladesh has
sheltered nearly 700,000 Rohingyas since August last year when they fled
‘ethnic cleansing’ in the Rakhine State.
Both countries have
signed a deal to start the repatriation process. But the international
community has been insisting on their safe, voluntary and dignified return.
The foreign minister
with Indian State Minister for External Affairs VK Singh discussed his plan
during a meeting on Friday in Singapore on the sidelines of the 25th ASEAN
Regional Forum.
Foreign Secretary Md
Shahidul Haque earlier last month said they had proposed to visit the Rakhine
State to see the situation before the beginning of the repatriation from
Bangladesh.
India said it is ready
to cooperate in the repatriation process.
A senior official at
the foreign ministry told bdnews24.com that the foreign minister would meet
State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, and her minister for foreign affairs.
He will travel to
Rakhine State with the members of the joint working group, formed to start the
process of repatriation, on Aug 11 before coming back to Dhaka.
The decision to visit
Myanmar follows a meeting between the foreign minister and Myanmar’s Union
Minister for the State Counsellor's Office Kyaw Tint Swe with Chinese Foreign
Minister Wang Yi in Beijing in July.
China proposed to
Myanmar that they should try to improve the situation in the Rakhine State in
three steps – to stop violence, to start repatriation as soon as possible, and
to promote local development.
Japanese Foreign
Minister Taro Kono, who made a brief visit on Tuesday to Dhaka after Myanmar,
also made five proposals to the Burmese authorities.
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