Bangkok: The Press Office of the Bangladesh government met with the Bangladeshi government last year after his first meeting after Sheikh Hasina, the Prime Minister of India on the sidelines of a regional summit in Bangladesh.
Ever since the relations between South Asian neighboring countries, which were strong under Hussein, they fled the country against a large -scale student protest and sought refuge in India.
The press office said that Nobel Peace Prize winner Mohammad Younus, who took over as the Chief Advisor to the interim government in Dhaka after leaving Hussein, said the press office.
Bemstick for multilateral technical and economic cooperation, or the Bay of Bengal, includes Thailand, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bhutan.
On Friday, Yunus posted a photo on social media in which he showed his hands shaking with Modi, and his press secretary Shafiq Alm later said that “the meeting was constructive, fruitful and fruitful”.
Younus smiled and shared a photo of the two men when he handed over a frame photo to Modi a decade ago-when in 2015, the Indian leader awarded a gold medal for the work that supported the poorest society in the society.
No statement was immediately received by New Delhi.
Younus, according to his press secretary, has also raised the issue of Dhaka’s long -run complaint with Modi, saying that Hussein’s fire extinguishers from exile are remarks.
Dhaka has requested that India’s extradition was allowed to face crimes against humanity in the murder of hundreds of protesters during the unrest, which dropped its government.
In Bangladesh, public opinion against India, partially, to decide to prohibit Hussein. New Delhi has not responded to Dhaka’s request to send its home to a trial.
Yunus, along with unsafe borders with India, as well as border violence concerns, as well as the waters of the joint rivers coming from India, such as the Ganges and Brahmaputra towards the sea.
After being responsible for Yunus, India has repeatedly urged Bangladesh to protect its minority Hindus that they are being targeted in a Muslim -majority country. Dhaka says violence has been exaggerated and this is not a sectarian problem.
“Hopefully, it would be hoped that the meeting would begin the process of rebuilding some engagement.”
“I think, at this point, just stabilizing relationships should be a priority.”
Modi and Younus ate on Thursday night-sitting together with other Bacstic Block leaders in Bankak-but the bilateral sit-in on Friday was the first after relations between neighboring countries.
With long cultural and business relations, the two countries share 4,000 km (2500 miles) borders.