UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Friday pledged UN support to Bangladesh to build a sustainable and equitable future for all.
"As the country undergoes important reforms and transitions, you can count on the UN to help build a sustainable and equitable future for all," he said after his meeting with Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus at the Chief Adviser’s Office in the morning.
The UN chief thanked Dr Yunus, the interim government and the people of Bangladesh for their warm welcome.
The UN Secretary-General and Dr Yunus discussed the issues of mutual interests, including the Rohingya refugee crisis.
Guterres expressed his full support for the reform process initiated by Bangladesh's interim government and voiced concerns for declining humanitarian aid for more than a million Rohingya refugees living in the country's southeast.
The UN chief reaffirmed the UN’s commitment to Dhaka's reform agenda and voiced his concerns for "one of the most discriminated peoples" in the world during a meeting with Bangladesh Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus at his Tejgaon office in Dhaka.
"I want to express our total commitment to the reform process. We are here to support your reforms. We wish you all the best. Whatever we can do, let us know," the UN Secretary General told Professor Yunus during his hour-long meeting.
UN chief speaks with Rohingya children at learning centre
He hoped that the reforms would lead to a free and fair election and a "real transformation" of the country. "I know the process of reforms can be complex," he said.
Guterres said he was also here to express solidarity with Myanmar's forcibly displaced Rohingya people during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
"I've never seen a population so discriminated against. The International community is forgetting the Rohingya," the UN Secretary General said as he voiced his deep concern over declining humanitarian aid for the 1.2 million Rohingya refugees who live in camps in Bangladesh's Cox's Bazar district.
"(Aid) cuts are a crime," he said, adding that Western nations were now doubling up on defense spending while humanitarian aid is squeezed across the globe.
Guterres also expressed the UN's "enormous gratitude" to Bangladesh for hosting the Rohingya refugees. "Bangladesh has been extremely generous to the Rohingya people."
"Rohingyas are a special case for me," he added.