Bangladesh debuts at top Saudi food expo to widen garment-dominated export base

Bangladeshi company Ghorer Bazar presents its products at AgroFood Jeddah on Dec. 3, 2025. (Saleh Uddin)
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Updated 03 December 2025
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Bangladesh debuts at top Saudi food expo to widen garment-dominated export base

  • As it clears certification, Bangladesh aims to increase food exports by Expo 2030
  • It sees entry into the Saudi market as a gateway to the GCC and MENA region

DHAKA: Bangladesh made its debut at Saudi Arabia’s main agriculture and food exhibition on Wednesday, seeking to diversify an export trade long dominated by garments.

Saudi Arabia is one of the top markets for Bangladeshi exporters in the Middle East, with the trade relationship largely shaped by labor migration and the apparel sector — the South Asian nation’s key revenue generator.

Bangladesh is the only South Asian country participating in AgroFood Jeddah, Saudi Arabia’s leading international exhibition for the agriculture, food, and agri-tech industries. It is taking place from Dec. 3-5, with exhibitors from the Middle East, China and Central Asia, as well as Indonesia, Thailand and Japan.

“This is our first participation of this kind in the Saudi market ... In this first initiative, five of our producers from the food sector are taking part,” Mahmudul Hasan, fair and display division director at Bangladesh’s Export Promotion Bureau, told Arab News.

“We now have a special focus on increasing exports to Saudi Arabia ... Our business community is also increasingly interested in tapping the potential of the Saudi market. In addition to garment products, food and allied food items are our next export priorities, as we have a large number of Bangladeshi migrants there.”

Some 3.6 million Bangladeshis live and work in Saudi Arabia, making it the largest expat group in the Kingdom and the largest Bangladeshi community outside Bangladesh — a captive market for producers back home.

But the current plans for expanding trade ties are not limited to this group.

“We are also trying to penetrate the mainstream Saudi market. To achieve this, we are working with our producers to improve compliance, quality, and competitiveness,” Hasan said. “If we can meet the required standards and enhance our competitiveness, our goods will certainly be able to secure a good share of the Kingdom’s market.”

Syeda Nahida Habiba, commercial counsellor at Bangladesh’s Consulate General in Jeddah, told Arab News that, to tap into the Kingdom’s food market, Bangladeshi authorities were now in talks with Saudi officials to finalize certification with the Saudi Food and Drug Administration and the Saudi Accreditation Center.

When all regulatory requirements are met, Bangladesh will focus on targeting the Saudi-hosted Expo 2030 and FIFA World Cup 2034.

“These two mega events will help us strengthen our export potential in the Kingdom’s markets,” Habiba said.

“With participation in the Jeddah expo, we want to register our presence among the Saudi buyers ... The Saudi market means something more to us: It opens the horizon to the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) and Middle Eastern and North African region. It’s a big opportunity for us.”


UK police hunt suspects after 600 items relating to the British Empire are stolen from a museum

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UK police hunt suspects after 600 items relating to the British Empire are stolen from a museum

  • The Avon and Somerset Police force said the items with “significant cultural value”
  • The force said it wanted to speak to four men over the theft and appealed to the public for information

LONDON: More than 600 artifacts relating to the history of the British Empire and Commonwealth have been stolen from the collection of Bristol Museum, police said Thursday as they released images of four suspects.
The Avon and Somerset Police force said the items with “significant cultural value” were taken from a storage building in the early hours of Sept. 25.
The force said it wanted to speak to four men over the theft and appealed to the public for information.
It was unclear why the appeal was being made more than two months after the crime.
“The theft of many items which carry a significant cultural value is a significant loss for the city,” said Det. Constable Dan Burgan.
“These items, many of which were donations, form part of a collection that provides insight into a multilayered part of British history, and we are hoping that members of the public can help us to bring those responsible to justice.”
The port city of Bristol, 120 miles (195 kilometers) southwest of London, played a major role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Ships based in the city transported at least half a million Africans into slavery before Britain outlawed the slave trade in 1807. Many 18th-century Bristolians helped fund the trade and shared in the profits, which also built handsome Georgian houses and buildings that still dot the city.
It was the focus of international attention and debate in 2020, when anti-racism demonstrators toppled a statue of 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston from its plinth in the city and dumped it in the River Avon.
The vandalized statue was later fished out and put on display in a museum.