Bangladesh student leaders refuse PM Hasina's call for dialogue
Bangladesh witnessed violent clashes between police and mostly student protesters demanding an end to a controversial quota system that reserved 30% of government jobs for relatives of veterans who fought in Bangladesh's War of Independence in 1971
PTI
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Witnesses said students protesting blocked major roads of Dhaka causing traffic snarls. FILE PHOTO: PTI
Dhaka, 3 Aug
Tension gripped Bangladesh afresh
on Saturday after leaders of the student movement refused Prime Minister Sheikh
Hasina’s invitation for talks while protesters laid siege on major streets in
the capital, days after more than 200 people died in anti-quota protests.
Bangladesh recently witnessed
violent clashes between the police and mostly student protesters demanding an
end to a controversial quota system that reserved 30 per cent of government
jobs for relatives of veterans who fought in Bangladesh's War of Independence
in 1971.
Witnesses said students protesting
blocked major roads of Dhaka causing traffic snarls while officials said
security forces were ordered to keep intensified vigil as protesters started
rallying at different city points.
On Friday, Prime Minister Hasina
urged the agitating students to meet at her Ganabhaban official residence for
talks to end the violence over the quota system in government jobs.
Her call came a day after new
protests erupted on Friday, leaving two people dead and more than 100 injured
as over 2,000 protesters gathered in parts of the capital, some shouting “down
with the autocrat” and demanding justice for victims. “I am saying again, they
(student leaders) can come to me for talks if they want they can bring with
them their guardians as well anytime,” she said during a meeting with leaders
of different professional groups. “The door of Ganabhaban is open (for them),”
she said.
"I want to listen to them. I
do not want conflict," she said while ruling Awami League sources said
three party leaders were tasked to communicate and convince the anti-quota
movement coordinators.
Meanwhile, two police officials
were suspended by higher authorities for their “unprofessional conduct”. The
officials fired gunshots that killed a second-year student of Northwestern
Rangpur University Abu Sayeed, the first casualty during the protest on the
university campus, intensifying the student's rage.
Video footage and photos showed
Sayeed standing, arms spread wide, alone, challenging the police crackdown
against protesters when a police officer suddenly shot him several times.
However, coordinators of the
Anti-Discrimination Student Movement said on Friday that they had no plan to
hold talks with the government, and overnight, they called a nationwide street
protest and “all-out non-cooperation” or civil disobedience campaign.
One of the six coordinators who
were earlier detained for their “own safety” in detective police custody and
freed after they announced the withdrawal of their movement on Friday said they
were forced to give the statement. "When we were detained in the office,
we were asked to meet with the Prime Minister and suspend the movement. There
was even a plan to take us to Ganobhaban forcibly,” one of the coordinators
Asif Mahmud said in a Facebook post.
"We are ready to pay the price
of an uncompromising stance, even if it means death. We call for the
participation of every citizen of Bangladesh in the student-citizen
uprising," Asif wrote.
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