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Bangladesh&rsquo;s feisty Prime Minister, Sheikh Hasina has stood up for global vaccine equity to counter the second Covid wave that has hit the rising South Asian nation with a vengeance.</p>
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&quot;The socio-economic impacts of the pandemic are massive and are still unfolding. It is, therefore, extremely important to strengthen the global and regional partnerships through coordinated efforts to address these challenges,&quot; Sheikh Hasina told a global audience assembled at the Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) on Tuesday.</p>
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A survey titled &quot;PPRC-BIGD Rapid Response Research Phase III&quot; also showed that&nbsp; one year after the Covid-19 breakout, household savings have depleted by nearly a quarter in rural areas, while debt burden has doubled.</p>
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Flagging the jabs -for-all slogan, the Bangladesh Prime Minister demanded that coronavirus vaccines should become a UN backed public goods to protect the entire humanity and not people in affluent countries alone. &quot;All nations need to work together to make the UN and other international organisations effective so that everyone&#39;s requirement of vaccines and medical requirements are met, &quot; Dhaka Tribune quoted her as saying.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
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Sheikh Hasina pointed out that all nations need to work together to make the UN and other international organisations effective &ldquo;so that everyone&#39;s requirement of vaccines and medical requirement are met &ldquo;.</p>
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Fearing acute vaccination shortages from India, which was combating a fierce second wave of Covid-19, Bangladesh has begun hunting for other sources, including China.</p>
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But that option may also not be available soon as Beijing has informed Dhaka that vaccine exports could commence only after December, Bangladesh&rsquo;s foreign minister AK Abdul Momen was quoted as saying. Bangladesh is also actively pursuing the possible option of manufacturing Russia&rsquo;s Sputnik V vaccine inside the country, according to local media reports.</p>
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One of the beneficiaries of globalisation which has climbed out of the Least Developed Country (LDC) status, Bangladesh has invested in high-tech parks, broadband and satellite connectivity, and developing human capital that was ready for innovation, not just for imitation, the Prime Minister said.</p>
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She pointed out that her county was at the forefront of combating Climate change, a template for participation in the current global mainstream.</p>
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&quot;Despite our resource scarcity, we&#39;ve established a Climate Change Trust Fund of about $450 million from our own resources,&quot; the prime minister observed.</p>
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The &ldquo;progressive&rdquo; woman Prime Minister pointed out that two years ago, the Bangladeshi parliament had adopted a motion declaring &quot;Planetary Emergency&quot; to highlight and deal with the climate crisis.</p>
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Bangladesh was now planting 30 million trees across the country, as part of celebrations of the birth centenary of Father of the Nation, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, she said,</p>
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&quot;We&#39;ve also adopted the &#39;Mujib Climate Prosperity Plan&#39; which will help mobilize resources for a better and secured future,&quot; said the Prime Minister.</p>
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Bangladesh is presiding over the Climate Vulnerable Forum, apart from paying host to the South Asian Regional Office of Global Centre for Adaptation.</p>
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