Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina expressed the hope that Bangladesh Navy would turn into a builder force from a buyer one gradually.
The government has taken various steps to this end, the premier said while addressing the Winter President Parade of the direct entry officers and Midshipmen of the Navy at Bangladesh Naval Academy in Chittagong on Sunday.
Mentioning various steps taken by her government to modernise the Bangladesh Navy, the Prime Minister said works are going on to construct the largest naval base with aviation facilities in Patuakhali, while Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib naval base in Dhaka for infrastructural development.
Besides, works are going on rapidly to set up a submarine base in Kutubdia for ensuring the proper management and maintenance of submarines and providing jetty facilities, she said.
Hasina said the work started to construct fleet headquarters in Sitakunda-Sandwip Channel in Chittagong with ship-berthing facilities. “So, I believe that the overall security of the country’s sea areas will be strengthened further.”
She said modern warships are being made with local technology in Khulna Shipyard and Narayanganj Dockyard run under the competent management of the Bangladesh Navy.
Two large anti-submarine warfare patrol crafts --‘Durgam’ and ‘Nishan’-- were commissioned in the naval fleet last month. Apart from this, a modern frigate is being constructed in Chittagong Drydock Limited, she added.
The Prime Minister said her government was able to establish Bangladesh’s sovereign rights in a vast sea area through peaceful settlement of maritime boundary disputes with Myanmar and India in the international court maintaining the friendly relations with the two countries.
Pointing at the midshipmen of the Navy, the Prime Minister hoped that they will engage themselves in the noble duty of protecting the country’s independence and sovereignty being imbued with the spirit of the Liberation War, reports UNB.
“Being members of a disciplined force, you will always show loyalty to your higher officers and sympathy to subordinates. You will be able to take Bangladesh Navy to a more glorious place in the global arena by maintaining the chain of command.”
“I’m glad to know that there are 21 females among those who got commissioned today, which is a big example of women empowerment in our country,” Hasina said.
She paid deep homage to Bir Shrestha Shaheed Ruhul Amin and other members of the Navy, who sacrificed their lives in the Liberation War.
Hasina said Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman could realise the importance of Naval force considering the geopolitical location of Bangladesh and demanded establishment of the headquarters of Naval forces in the then East Bengal in the 1966 historic Six-Point Programme, but the Pakistani rulers had not accepted it.