Published on 12:00 AM, June 18, 2022

Sanctions on Rab won’t damage US- Bangladesh ties

Says Peter Haas

US Ambassador to Bangladesh Peter Haas has said the sanctions on Rab will not damage the bilateral relationship and that the two countries, which have deep ties, will move on and work together based on shared values of democracy and human rights.

"…A lot of people ask me if I think this will damage our bilateral relations. And I just say, I don't think it has to," he said in a talk show titled AmTalk. Video of the event was uploaded to the embassy's Facebook page last evening.

The envoy said there are frictions in the relationship. "And that's okay when you have a relationship as broad and deep as ours. But what I want to see us do both on Rab and every other aspect is to sit down and to talk about... what do we need to do to resolve this issue."

Last year, Washington imposed sanctions on Rab and some of its current and former officials.

Haas said his country heard a lot of times how Bangladesh was surprised when the US imposed sanctions.

"And maybe we're almost surprised they're surprised. Because already in 2018, we stopped providing training to the Rab, because of our concerns on human rights. For several years, we've published in our human rights reports our concerns. We've raised it with them in bilateral meetings. And so, while the sanctions may have come as a surprise, the idea that we had concerns should not have."

The envoy said the US is also not perfect when it comes to democracy but that the striving for democracy must continue.

Referring to Bangladesh, he said there are things that the Bangladeshi people and the government can work on as well and the elections provide a good framing for that, because they're still more than a year out.

"We don't favour any particular party, or platform, or anything else … But what we would like to see is what I think all Bangladeshis would like to see, which is an election run at international standards that allow the people of Bangladesh to choose their next leaders in an open, competitive process free of violence and free of coercion."

Haas said he welcomes some of the signs, some of the signals that they have been receiving.

"Foreign Minister [Abdul] Momen has made it clear that Bangladesh will welcome international observers. And I think that's critical.

"But the election actually has already started. And so, it's important to be looking at it all the way from now to make sure that everyone feels safe and secure in their decision on whether or not to participate in any aspect of the upcoming elections," he added.