- Ishaq Dar to visit Bangladesh next month: High Commissioner
- Deputy PM likely to call on the chief advisor to Dr. Muhammad Yunus.
- The two countries have “determined” to bring their relations to new heights.
Islamabad: The golden age of Pakistani-Bangladesh relations started and “we are determined to take them to the plateau of Platinum,” said the High Commissioner of Bangladesh Muhammad Iqbal Hussain Khan.
The High Commissioner said this in an interview with The news in Islamabad on Sunday. He said Pakistani Deputy Prime Minister Senator Muhammad Ishaq Dar would visit the capital of Bangladesh in April.
This would be the first high -level political visit of Islamabad to Dacca since the administration in place took office in Bangladesh last year.
It is likely that Senator Dar also calls the chief advisor, Dr. Muhammad Yunus, in addition to holding several other high -level bilateral meetings. He will transmit the goodwill message of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Dr. Yunus. Dacca’s visit to the assistant PM would greatly help strengthen bidirectional relations.
Khan said the two fraud countries were also entirely intended to open new views of their bilateral relations. It was encouraging that trade between our two countries has already started, and relations will surely extend to several other spheres, he added. “More areas are identified while the enormous capacity exists to increase the same thing.”
To a question, the High Commissioner said that the two countries were determined to bring their relations to new heights in all the departments of life.
The High Commissioner said that the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Pakistan Amna Baloch would visit Dhaka before DPM’s visit. Later, an important visit from Dhaka to Islamabad would also take place.
Ambassador Khan expressed the hope that connectivity between Pakistan and Bangladesh will be improved, because the inhabitants of the two countries were impatient to undertake visits.
Ambassador Muhammad Iqbal Hussain Khan, who assumed the mission in the last week of December, argued that the convergence of Islamabad and Dhaka on a certain number of regional and international questions was a source of encouragement for the inhabitants of the two countries.