The Prime Minister is likely to deliver her pre-recorded speech on September 26 apart from her virtual presence in other high-level events.
Bangladesh continues its efforts to keep the Rohingya issue on the table in the UN, an official told UNB.
Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen will brief media virtually on Monday on various aspects of the UNGA and Bangladesh's virtual presence, he said.
The 75th UNGA session began on September 15 and this year, due to the ongoing global pandemic, it will be unlike any other in the organization’s three quarters of a century of existence.
This month, there will be no bumping into presidents or the occasional global celebrity in hectic and sometimes crushed corridors at the UN Headquarters in New York.
There will be no marvelling at seemingly endless presidential motorcades on First Avenue and no “standing-room only” moments in the gilded General Assembly Hall, as the organization’s busiest time of the year is reimagined in the time of COVID-19.
The centrepiece of any new General Assembly session, is undoubtedly the General Debate, which starts on September 22, a week after the official opening.
It is a globally unique occasion at which presidents and heads of state (or sometimes their deputies or foreign ministers) take to the dais, and address a world audience on an issue of their choosing.
This year, because of the pandemic, the UN said, world leaders will be staying away and have been invited to send in pre-recorded videos of their speeches which will be broadcast “as live”.
Speeches are expected to be introduced by a New York-based representative of each state, who will be physically present.
Also read: UNGA holds high-level Forum on Bangladesh’s flagship resolution ‘Culture of Peace’