UN representatives reaffirmed their continued support for Bangladesh’s LDC graduation process, governance reforms, climate resilience initiatives and expansion of social protection programmes.
Illustration: TBS
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Illustration: TBS
Highlights
- Bangladesh seeks stronger UN support for LDC transition, SDGs
- Titumir requests three-year extension to LDC graduation preparation
- Government presents ‘3R’ strategy to advance reforms and stability
- UN reaffirms support for governance, climate resilience and social protection
- Bangladesh cites $132bn annual SDG financing gap
- Rohingya response faces 37% funding shortfall, $261m immediate gap.
Bangladesh has called for stronger United Nations support to ensure a sustainable graduation from the Least Developed Country (LDC) category, implement the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and advance the government’s reform agenda.
Prime Minister’s Finance and Planning Adviser Rashed Al Mahmud Titumir made the appeal during separate meetings at the UN Headquarters in New York with UN Under-Secretary-General Li Junhua, Executive Secretary of the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) Armida Salsiah Alisjahbana, and UNDP Regional Director Kanni Wignaraja.
During the meetings, Titumir reiterated Bangladesh’s request for a three-year extension of its LDC graduation preparatory period. He also outlined the government’s “3R” strategy – Recovery, Restoration and Reconstruction for Acceleration – to restore macroeconomic stability and implement institutional reforms following the public mandate expected from the February 2026 national election.
UN representatives reaffirmed their continued support for Bangladesh’s LDC graduation process, governance reforms, climate resilience initiatives and expansion of social protection programmes.
Photo: Courtesy
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Photo: Courtesy
In his meeting with Li Junhua, Titumir formally presented Bangladesh’s request for the extension, saying additional time is needed to maintain macroeconomic stability, effectively implement the Smooth Transition Strategy and ensure a sustainable and irreversible graduation from LDC status.
Li assured Bangladesh of the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs’ continued support and pledged to work closely with the country to facilitate a successful transition.
Separately, speaking at the General Debate of the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF) 2026 at the UN Headquarters on Monday, Bangladesh’s Country Statement highlighted the need for stronger international support, including grants, concessional financing and technology transfer, to bridge an annual SDG financing gap of more than $132 billion and accelerate progress towards the 2030 Agenda.
The statement said Bangladesh continues to face significant financial constraints in achieving the SDGs, particularly in clean energy, economic growth and infrastructure. It also noted a 37% funding shortfall for supporting around 1.3 million Rohingya refugees, with an immediate financing gap of approximately $261 million.
