Foreign Minister Hasan Mahmud on Tuesday said Bangladesh will not only continue to act upon the pledges it has made for its domestic context but would also take up emerging issues and challenges pertaining to migration and development for informed deliberations at the international level.
"Bangladesh remained active in the formulation of the Compact, in developing the modalities for its implementation review, and also in steering its first review process," he said while speaking at the launching ceremony of the World Migration Report (WMR) 2024 as the chief guest.
IOM Director-General Amy Pope, Chief of Mission of the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Bangladesh Abdusattor Esoev, EU Ambassador to Bangladesh Charles Whiteley and former Foreign Secretary Shahidul Haque, among others, spoke.
Hasan said it was Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina who first the mooted the idea of the Global Migration Compact during her address to the UN General Assembly in 2016.
The WMR 2024 makes a compelling case about ever growing number of forced displacements due to conflicts and violence, said the Minister.
The mass atrocities being committed in the Gaza Strip by the occupying Israeli forces, violating international norms of selectivity or proportionality, are an affront to our shared humanity, he said.
"In our immediate neighbourhood, the increasingly complex security situation in Myanmar has led to resurgence in mixed migratory movements across borders," Hasan said.
This is causing unwarranted delay in the much-awaited repatriation of the 1.3 million Rohingya now sheltered in Bangladesh, aggravating their sense of frustration and internecine conflicts, he observed.