Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus reached the Egyptian capital on the contemporary time (18 December) to support the D-8 Summit.
The Minister of the Public Industry Sector of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Mohamed Shimi, got him on the Cairo Global Airport when he reached there at 11 am (local time), said the Chief Adviser’s press wing.
Later, the chief adviser held a temporary assembly with the minister.
Earlier within the morning, Yunus left Dhaka on a three-day search the advice of with to Egypt.
The flight carrying Chief Adviser Yunus departed Hazrat Shahjalal Global Airport at 1:20am on the contemporary time.
Heads of govt from several nations, together with Bangladesh, Indonesia, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan, will join the summit on 19 December.
Referring to the theme of this yr’s D-8 Summit, “Investing in Formative years and Supporting SMEs: Shaping Tomorrow’s Economic system,” CA’s Deputy Press Secretary Abul Kalam Azad Majumder said this summit is critical for Bangladesh as the chief adviser has been speaking for utilising the strength and doubtless of youths after taking up the payment.
“He [CA] constantly wishes our youths to flourish to their beefy doubtless, and he has been working to this discontinue. Now he’ll bag a scope to work on it in a world forum (D-8),” he said.
Besides, the Chief Adviser will ship a lecture on the Al-Azhar College in Cairo, said Azad.
This week marks an “critical 2nd” for the D-8 with the forty eighth Session of the D-8 Rate assembly held in Cairo.
Key discussions will unfold over the following couple of days, culminating within the twenty first Session of the D-8 Council of Foreign Ministers on 18 December and the extremely anticipated 11th D-8 Summit on 19 December.
These meetings will elevate together leaders to toughen financial cooperation and outline a shared imaginative and prescient for sustainable pattern among member states.
The D-8 Organisation for Economic Cooperation, customarily customarily known as Developing-8, is an organisation for pattern cooperation among Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Malaysia, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Turkey.