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JICA to resume sending volunteers to Bangladesh 7 years after terror attack

JICA to resume sending volunteers to Bangladesh 7 years after terror attack
National

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) will resume sending volunteers to Bangladesh seven years after the Holey Artisan attack in Dhaka.

In July 2016, a Dhaka restaurant, Holey Artisan Bakery, came under a terrorist attack where 22 people were killed, including seven Japanese who were working for JICA projects in the country.

The JICA had then immediately repatriated more than 20 volunteers from Bangladesh and suspended sending volunteers for safety reasons.

However, it now considers the security situation in Bangladesh to be stable and has decided to restart dispatch of volunteers to Bangladesh as early as September, reports the NHK World-Japan.

As a first step in the development, the agency plans to send two young volunteers for a short-term stay to help rehabilitate people with disabilities and oversee quality control of processed agricultural products.

JICA volunteers began aid activities in Bangladesh in 1973, two years after the country's independence.

At one point, more than 60 volunteers were active in Bangladesh and achieved good results.

Between 1999 and 2015, nearly 70 volunteers sent by JICA worked in polio control and immunisation programmes in Bangladesh.

They travelled throughout the country to ensure every child could be vaccinated against polio. Their activities led to the eradication of the infectious disease there.

According to JICA officials, they expect volunteers to help improve people's livelihoods and address disparities between urban and rural communities.