Dr Khalilur appointed as High Representative to Chief Adviser for Rohingya, priority affairs
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Ambassador Dr Khalilur Rahman has been appointed as the High Representative of the Chief Adviser for Rohingya and Priority Affairs.
The Cabinet Division issued a circular in this regard on Tuesday.
Dr Rahman joined the diplomatic service of Bangladesh in 1979 upon securing the first position in the first regular BCS examinations held in 1977.
In the same year, he stood first in the first class in MA examinations in economics at Dhaka University. He served as an executive at the American Express International Bank during 1978-79.
Dr Rahman studied at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University and the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University during 1980-83, and earned the degrees of MA in Law and Diplomacy and PhD in Economics.
During 1983-85, he served at the South Asia Division of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and as Private Secretary to the Foreign Minister. In 1985, he was transferred to the Permanent Mission of Bangladesh to the United Nations in New York.
He represented Bangladesh at the Economic and Financial Committee of the UN General Assembly and acted as the spokesperson of the LDCs at this committee and at the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations.
Dr Rahman joined the United Nations secretariat in 1991 as Special Adviser at the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in Geneva. During the ensuing 25 years at the UN, he served in different senior positions in New York and Geneva, including as Head of Economic, Social and Development Affairs at the Executive Office of the UN Secretary-General; Executive Secretary of the UN Secretary General's High-level Group on the Technology Bank; Head of UNCTAD Technology Division, Management Division and Trade Policy Analysis; UNCTAD Bureau Chief at the UN headquarters; Chief of LDCs programme at the UN secretariat; Chair of UN system interagency group on non-tariff barriers to international trade; and principal coordinator of the programme on new and dynamic sectors of world trade, etc.
Dr Rahman was a lead author of and substantive contributor to several UN flagship publications as well as numerous reports of the UN Secretary-General and the UNCTAD Secretary-General on issues of trade, finance and development. He also edited several analytical series on international trade policy.
He led the drafting of the Programme of Action of the Brussels LDCs Conference in 2001, which adopted the historic duty and quota-free treatment of the exports of LDCs.
In 2001, Dr Rahman briefly returned to the government service to serve as private secretary to the late Mr Justice Latifur Rahman, chief adviser of the third caretaker government. He is a founder of the East West University in Dhaka and currently serves on its Board of Trustees.