UNB :
UN Resident Coordinator in Bangladesh Gwyn Lewis has said they stand ready to help deliver lasting reform, climate resilience, economic transformation, and gender equality, leaving no one behind as Bangladesh prepares for LDC graduation.
She said the past year was a challenging one but it also revealed the determination and dignity of the Bangladeshi people.
“I am proud of the partnership between Bangladesh and the UN: it remains grounded in shared values and aspirations,” Gwyn Lewis said.
The government of Bangladesh and the United Nations Country Team (UNCT) convened on Thursday for the biannual meeting of the Joint Steering Committee (JSC) to assess the implementation of the UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF), launch the 2024 UN Country Results Report, and endorse strategic priorities for the year ahead.
Reflecting on a year marked by political transition, major climate disasters and reform momentum, the JSC highlighted the UN’s adaptability in navigating through the transition, as well as its support in advancing key areas of governance reform, human rights, and institutional strengthening.
The UN delivered $215 million in development programming in 2024.
Among the many highlights of its work, the UN supported the development of the Smooth Transition Strategy for LDC graduation, created over 4,000 jobs in partnership with the private sector, helped 116 businesses to improve turnover, and facilitated digital skills training for over 11,000 young people.
UN-supported efforts enabled access to social protection services for 40 million people, with 580,000 children benefitting from protection programmes.
Across Bangladesh, 5.6 million adolescent girls were vaccinated against the Human Papilloma Virus to protect against cervical cancer, covering 93% of girls aged 10-14 in the divisions targeted.
In a year marked by climate disasters, the UN coordinated $44 million of assistance for flood and cyclone response and provided humanitarian aid to 1.72 million disaster-affected people, as well as facilitating climate risk awareness for 2 million Bangladeshis.
Through its governance and gender work, the UN enabled Village Courts to serve 66% of rural unions reaching 61 million people, supported the Sexual Harassment Prevention and Protection Bill and advocated for the amendment of the Domestic Violence Act.
The meeting, co-chaired by Md Shahriar Kader Siddiky, Secretary of the Economic Relations Division (ERD), and Gwyn Lewis, UN Resident Coordinator in Bangladesh, brought together senior representatives from line ministries and UN agencies.
With the government’s decision to extend the Eighth Five-Year Plan by one year, the JSC formally endorsed a corresponding one-year extension of the UNSDCF (2022–2026) to maintain alignment with national development planning.
A special session was dedicated to the Declaration on Future Generations and the UN’s work on youth engagement.