December 22, 2024

Diplomatic Correspondent: Visiting Indian foreign secretary Vikram Misri has said New Delhi wants to increase engagement with Bangladesh’s Interim Government and make joint and concerted efforts to boost up relations between the two neighbours.

“There is no second thought about increasing the engagements. We see it as beneficial for both countries,” Misri said when he called on Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus at the State Guest House Jamuna on Monday.

“We want to carry on from where we left off,” Misri said as they discussed issues of mutual interests.

During the 40-minute meeting, the issues of minorities, misinformation campaigns, ousted dictator Sheikh Hasina’s stay in India, regional cooperation and the July-August mass uprising came for discussion, CA office sources said.

Professor Yunus described relationships between  Bangladesh and India as “very solid” and “close”. He asked India to help clear the “clouds” that have cast a shadow over the relationship between the two neighbours in recent times.

He raised the issue of the ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who fled to India on August 5 after 15 years of brutal and corrupt dictatorship.

“Our people are concerned because she is making many statements from there. It creates tensions,” Professor Yunus told the Indian foreign secretary.

Misri, who held a bilateral meeting with his Bangladesh counterpart earlier in the day, said he had monitored the events happened in Bangladesh almost every hour during the July-August mass uprising.

The Chief Adviser elaborated how students, working class people and common messes joined hands in July-August movement to end Hasina’s corrupt regime through the mass uprising.

“Our job is to keep their dreams alive. It is a new Bangladesh,” he said and briefly outlined the reform initiatives undertaken by the Interim Government.

Misri said Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was among the first foreign leaders to greet Professor Yunus after he assumed office.

“We wish you every success,” he said, adding that media narratives and the Indian government’s perception about India-Bangladesh relations are different.

Misri said it was a wrong perception that India has ties with one particular party in Bangladesh. “We are not meant for one particular party, but for everyone,” he said.

Professor Yunus called for close bilateral cooperation in flood and water management urging India to join with his initiative for revival of SAARC.

“We want to build a prosperous new future for all of us in this region,” the Chief Adviser said.

Misri said that India continues to engage with SAARC, while there are some obstacles.

About the minority issues, the Chief Adviser said the Interim Government is committed to protecting every citizen and safeguarding their rights irrespective of their creed, colour, ethnicity and gender.

“We are a family. We have to work together,” he said. India doubled the number of visas for Bangladeshis last month and would increase the number further in the coming days, Misri said.

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