Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus and UN Special Envoy on Myanmar Julie Bishop have discussed the Rohingya crisis and explored fresh ways to resolve it and mobilise new donors for humanitarian assistance for more than a million forcibly displaced Rohingyas living in the camps in Bangladesh's southeast.
Julie Bishop called on Dr Yunus at the State Guest House Jamuna in Dhaka on Sunday, reads a press release.
Dr Yunus has sought UN Special Envoy's support to help ease the humanitarian crisis in the civil war-wracked Rakhine state and prevent the influx of new refugees fleeing Western Myanmar.
Professor Yunus said the United Nations would hold an international conference on the Rohingya crisis later this year, and he urged Julie Bishop, a former acting Prime Minister of Australia, to play a central role in the major meeting.
"Your role will be crucial," the Chief Adviser said, adding that Malaysia and Finland have agreed to become co-facilitators of the conference.
Bishop stressed the need to make the UN international conference on Rohingya a major success, as it would be crucial to resolve the decade-long crisis sustainably.
Bishop noted that the UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres would visit Bangladesh in mid-March and would meet with the Rohingyas in the camps in Cox's Bazar.