Bangladesh chief adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus urged Pakistan prime minister Shehbaz Sharif to settle the issues of 1971 to help Dhaka move forward with its relationship with Islamabad.
‘The issues have kept coming again and again. Let’s settle those issues for us to move forward,’ Yunus told Sharif.
Sharif said that the 1974 tripartite agreement involving Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India settled things, ‘but if there are other outstanding issues,’ he would be happy to look at them.
Yunus said that it would be nice to resolve things ‘once and for all for the future generations.’
The chief adviser and Pakistan prime minister Sharif met on the sidelines of the D8 Summit at Cairo in Egypt also agreed to strengthen relations between the two countries through increased trade, commerce and exchange of sports and cultural delegations, according to a press release issued by chief adviser’s press wing.
The two leaders also expressed their desire to extend cooperation in new areas such as the sugar industry and dengue management when they held a meeting at a hotel in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, on the sidelines of the D-8 summit.
Yunus and Sharif discussed issues of mutual interest, including the revival of the SAARC—a key feature of the foreign policy announced by the chief adviser after he took over as the head of the interim government.
Yunus also spoke about his government’s plan to carry out ‘essential reforms’ and hold the general election before mid-2026. He said that he was leading a consensus-building commission to hold a dialogue on the reforms.
Pakistan prime minister Shehbaz Sharif called for a strategic relationship between Dhaka and Islamabad.
‘We are really looking forward to strengthening our relationship with our brother-in-country Bangladesh,’ Sharif said.
He hailed Yunus for his initiative to revive SAARC and Bangladesh to work on the possibility of holding a summit of the regional body.
‘This is a top priority,’ Professor Yunus told Sharif.
‘I am a big fan of the idea of SAARC. I keep harping on the issue. I want a summit of SAARC leaders even if it is only for a photo session because that will carry a strong message,’ he said.
The Pakistan prime minister offered technical support to better manage Bangladesh’s state-run sugar mills.
He condoled the deaths from the dengue outbreak in Bangladesh and added Dhaka could benefit from Pakistan’s experience in combating the disease.
‘Our fight against dengue in Punjab about a decade ago was hailed as world-class. We can send a delegate to Bangladesh for sharing our experience with Bangladeshi officials,’ he said.
Yunus thanked Sharif for his support and hoped Pakistan and Bangladesh would continue these efforts.
Pakistan’s foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, and Professor Yunus’s Special Envoy Lutfey Siddiqi, were, among others, present on the occasion.
Siddiqi invited Pakistan foreign minister Dar to visit Bangladesh in February on his way to a Malaysia tour, and he accepted the offer.
Pakistan prime minister Sharif also invited Professor Yunus to visit their country at his convenience.