SDG advocate Queen Mathilde visits Cox's Bazar Rohingya camps

UN Secretary-General's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) advocate Queen Mathilde visited 

Rohingya camps in Cox's Bazar district on Tuesday.

Information Minister Dr Hasan Mahmud, among others, accompanied the Belgian queen during her visit there.

She visited a learning center, participated in a session with women working on preventing gender-based violence, interacted with women learning new skills and joined a short briefing on the work on mental health and spoke with mental health volunteers.

She is scheduled to return to Dhaka on Tuesday evening and join a dinner hosted by Parliament Speaker Dr Shirin Sharmin Chaudhury.

The UN country team in Bangladesh on Monday warmly welcomed Queen Mathilde.

In the context of the Covid-19 pandemic which stalled and reversed development progress globally, and the subsequent Russia-Ukraine war that induced a cost-of-living crisis, this visit "highlights the heightened importance of the SDGs, and also showcases Bangladesh's dynamism and commitment", said the Office of the UN Resident Coordinator in Dhaka.Courtesy

On her first day in the country, the Belgian queen visited Fakir Apparels Ltd, a garment factory in Narayanganj that produces clothes for major international brands.

About one-third of the factory's employees are women, who have participated in women's empowerment initiatives by the UN International Labour Organisation (ILO) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) through the Better Work program.

Partnering with 47 of the world's leading brands and employers' associations, the Better Work programme supports 450 factories and has impacted more than 1.25 million workers in Bangladesh.

This work contributes to the sustainable development goals of achieving gender equality, promoting inclusive and sustainable economic growth, and ensuring decent work for all.

The Belgian Queen met with some of the women working at the factory and visited the childcare facilities.

“I am delighted that the Queen of Belgium has joined us in advocating for decent work and the SDGs in Bangladesh. Ensuring decent work contributes to progress on many other SDGs including those related to inequality, poverty, food security, health, and the environment — particularly for dynamic countries like Bangladesh," said Tuomo Poutiainen, ILO Country Director for Bangladesh. 

Afterward, she visited an Ability Based Accelerated Learning centre in Dhaka's Khilgaon area, where she spoke with the children about how the Covid-19 pandemic had disrupted their lives and education.Courtesy

In accordance with the sustainable development goal of quality education, UNICEF-supported learning centres and catch-up programs offer flexible education for over 80,000 Bangladeshi children aged 7-14 who have dropped out, are at risk of dropping out from school, or have never been enrolled in formal education.

Once children reach age-appropriate skills, the centres support their enrolment in formal primary schools.

 “The Queen's visit comes as the crisis is well into its sixth year of displacement, and against the backdrop of a serious decline in available funding.; It will help keep the attention on the Rohingya situation, which continues to be one of the largest refugee crises in the world,” said Johannes van der Klaauw, UNHCR – the UN Refugee Agency- Representative in Bangladesh. 

“The Queen's visit is a significant support to our ongoing efforts to mobilize sufficient funding for life-saving and life-sustaining assistance but also for key protection services, especially for women and children, such as preventing gender-based violence and addressing mental health problems.”

During her visit to the camps, the Queen met children and their teachers in one of the learning centres in the camps, where she was briefed about the important steps being taken to introduce the Myanmar Curriculum and the challenges in identifying and training more Rohingya refugees as teachers and the need for additional space to accommodate more students. 

The Myanmar curriculum will lead the way towards a more formal education and nurture the hope that children will be able to continue their education once they  can safely return home. 

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Young adolescent Rohingya climate activists also explained their role in taking care of the environment and raising awareness in their communities to prevent deforestation and protect the flora and fauna. 

UNHCR briefed on various activities to protect the environment and manage waste, enhance the resilience of refugees and host communities to respond to and prevent shocks as a result of climate change and natural hazards, while investing in infrastructure and regreening efforts.

The Queen met with Rohingya women volunteers working to prevent and respond to gender-based violence and participated in a discussion with Rohingya refugee psychosocial counsellors to learn more about the mental health situation of their community.

 During the visit, the delegation was welcomed in various facilities managed by UNHCR and its partners, including national organizations, such as BRAC, CODEC, GK, IUCN, NGO Forum, as well as UNICEF and UN Women.

Queen Mathilde ascended to the throne in 2013.

She is the honorary president of both Child Focus, a foundation for missing and sexually exploited children, and Unicef Belgium.

In 2001, Queen Mathilde established the Princess Mathilde Fund (now the Queen Mathilde Fund) to promote the care of vulnerable people. As an SDG Advocate, she is particularly focused on mental health.