Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen on Friday called for an incentive-based and long-term package for the graduating and graduated countries from LDCs as they are at a high risk of sliding back -- both due to the Covid-19 impacts and the loss of LDC specific support measures.
The Foreign Minister said most of the LDCs have limited fiscal buffers and absence of ex-ante insurance schemes against shocks, which make their graduation trajectory highly challenging.
Dr Momen was speaking as a keynote speaker at a high-level virtual event on ‘Building Resilience for Sustainable and Irreversible Graduation of the LDCs’ hosted by the Permanent Mission of Bangladesh in New York in collaboration with the Permanent Mission of Canada and the United Nations Office of the High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States (OHRLLS).
He underlined the importance of adequate financing and resources as critical means for LDCs to keep pace with graduation expectations.
Dr Momen emphasised that LDCs need enhanced financing support to mitigate critical deficits in physical and institutional infrastructure and capacity building.
Eisenhower Mkaka, MP, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Malawi and the Chair of the Global coordination bureau of the LDCs, also delivered a keynote speech at the event.
Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator, Liu Zhenmin, Under-Secretary-General, UNDESA, Fekitamoeloa Katoa ‘Utoikamanu, Under-Secretary-General and High Representative, OHRLLS, Taffere Tesfachew, Chair of the Committee for Development Subgroup on LDCs, Permanent Representatives of Qatar and Nepal, and Deputy Permanent Representative of Turkey also spoke on the occasion, reports UNB.
Bangladesh Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Rabab Fatima made the opening remarks while the Canadian Permanent Representative Ambassador Robert Rae delivered the closing remarks. They are the Co-chairs of the Preparatory Committee of the 5th UN conference on LDCs.
Identifying political vision as the key to a LDC’s development trajectory towards graduation, Dr Momen said that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina led Bangladesh’s graduation journey from the front.
The recommendation by the UN Committee for Development Policy for graduation of Bangladesh was a momentous occasion for the entire nation, he said.
It coincided with the 50th anniversary of Bangladesh’s independence and the birth centenary of the Father of the Nation.
Bangladesh’s graduation was built on the vision of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to transform Bangladesh into a middle-income country by 2021 and a developed country by 2041, said the Foreign Minister, adding that the “Digital Bangladesh” revolution also paved the way to accelerate Bangladesh’s progress.
Highlighting the multidimensional challenges faced by the graduating and graduated countries, the Foreign Minister identified access to safe and affordable Covid-19 vaccines as the top priority for the LDCs now.
He said the most effective solution to this issue will be to utilize TRIPS’ (WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) waiver to transfer technology and know-hows to LDCs that have production capacities for vaccines.
The minister urged the development partners and vaccines manufacturers to extend support in this regard.
Dr Momen underscored the importance of promoting export diversification in LDCs with a firm commitment to DFQF market access, enhancing South-South and trilateral cooperation, incentivizing job creation, skills development, scaled up social protection of migrants, enhancing monitoring and support mechanism in the post-graduation phase etc.
The Foreign Minister is now on an official visit to New York and is scheduled to return on June 22.