Home ›› 25 Sep 2020 ›› World Biz
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Friday asked Bangladesh’s diplomats to reinforce economic diplomacy for expanding trade and business to achieve economic self-reliance for the country.
“Diplomacy has transformed into almost economic diplomacy. Now we need to see how we should expand trade and business, to achieve economic self-reliance by maintaining good relations with all, to achieve development, and bring peace through collaborating one another. We’ll have to carry out diplomacy in such a way,” she said.
The Prime Minister was addressing a discussion virtually from her official residence Ganobhaban.
The discussion was arranged by the Foreign Ministry at the Foreign Service Academy in the city commemorating the historic Bangla speech by Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) as Bangabandhu delivered his maiden speech in the UNGA on this day in 1974.
“In today’s world, the responsibility of our diplomatic missions has also changed. Now it’s rather an economic diplomacy, not only political diplomacy,” said the Prime Minister.
At the function, Sheikh Hasina also opened the newly constructed Foreign Service Academy Building digitally in Sugandha in the city’s Balley road area.
Hasina unveiled the covers of two books titled “Bangabandhu, Sheikh Hasina and the United Nations: Bangladesh at the World Stage” and “Bangabandhu: The People’s Hero” published by the Foreign Ministry on the occasion of the Mujib Borsha (Mujib Year).
Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen read out the keynote paper, while State Minister for Foreign Affairs Md Shahriar Alam, Foreign Secretary Masud Bin Momen and UN Resident Coordinator in Dhaka Mia Seppo spoke at the discussion meeting.
Rector of the Foreign Service Academy Ambassador Syed Masud Mahmood Khundoker made a presentation over the newly-constructed building of the academy.
Two audio-visual presentations were screened over Bangabandhus’s maiden speech in the UNGA as well as Bangabandhu’s first office in Sugandha depicting the early days of the government of Bangladesh as a nascent state.
Sugandha was the first Ganabhaban after the country’s independence from where the Father of the Nation led his government and used to formulate and conduct foreign policy matters, among other important issues.
(Source: UNB)