ILO chief praises Bangladesh's labour reforms as 'historic' shift from past inertia
FE REPORT | Friday, 19 December 2025
The head of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) has praised Bangladesh for a comprehensive and potentially transformative programme of labor reforms.
In a letter dated December 17, the ILO chief described the programme undertaken by Bangladesh as wide-ranging and potentially transformative, signaling growing international confidence in the country's efforts to strengthen workers' rights, said a spokesman of the CA Office on Thursday.
ILO Director-General Gilbert F. Houngbo commended the Bangladeshi government for what he called a "clear outline" of recent reforms, conveyed earlier to the organization by the chief adviser's special envoy, Lutfey Siddiqi.
"I would like to commend the efforts of the government of Bangladesh in undertaking a wide range of labor reforms," Houngbo wrote, singling out the Bangladesh Labour (Amendment) Ordinance, 2025 as a particularly significant step forward.
The ILO's appreciation follows a detailed update sent on November 21 by Siddiqi, outlining measures taken to advance workers' rights, including freedom of association, collective bargaining, social dialogue, and improved working conditions.
In that communication, Siddiqi said the reform drive had been launched on the "clear instructions" of Chief Adviser Professor Muhammad Yunus, with an explicit aim of breaking from what he described as years of "foot-dragging".
Houngbo also highlighted Bangladesh's recent ratification of additional international conventions on occupational safety and health, as well as violence and harassment at work, calling the move "another historical milestone".
The instruments of ratification were formally deposited in Geneva on November 20 by the labor adviser, Brigadier General (retd) Dr. M. Sakhawat Hussain.
Taken together, Siddiqi said, the reforms and treaty commitments would "irreversibly take the country's labor standards to a much higher plane", stressing that the significance lay not only in the outcomes but also in the institutional processes being established.
In his response, Houngbo welcomed Bangladesh's decision to place trust in the ILO to support the reform process, expressing gratitude for the opportunity to work with the government, workers' representatives, and employers' organizations through technical assistance.
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