Explorer

Normalcy Returning In Bangladesh After Week-Long Clashes, Curfew Lifted For 7 Hours

The government has said no legal action will be taken against the student protesters, but media reports suggest around 2,700 people have been arrested.

After a week of clashes that reportedly led to the death of nearly 200 people, including security personnel, Bangladesh was slowly getting back to normalcy on Wednesday, with the authorities lifting the curfew for seven hours. According to a report by AP, offices and banks opened for a few hours on Wednesday. Although most of the country remained without internet, broadband internet was restored in some areas in Dhaka and the second-largest city of Chattogram. The report said that, after the curfew was lifted, thousands of cars were back on the streets in Dhaka.

The Bangladesh government, the report said, relaxed the curfew from 10 am to 5 pm, and allowed offices and banks to open from 11 am to 3 pm. Several garment factories that export primarily to Western countries remained open as well.

The government has said no legal action will be taken against the student protesters, who hit the streets over job reservations for freedom fighters' descendents, but media reports suggest around 2,700 people have been arrested. This reportedly includes opposition supporters. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has also pledged that the perpetrators of violence would face justice. 

The country’s junior minister for information and broadcasting, Mohammad Ali Arafat, told a news conference on Wednesday that the official casualty figures will be announced after a judicial inquiry. 

The week-long clashes erupted after students protested against a decision to reserve 30% of government jobs for relatives of veterans who fought in Bangladesh’s war of independence in 1971. On Sunday, the Supreme Court said the quota will be cut to 5% and 93% of civil service jobs will be merit-based. The remaining 2% will be reserved for members of ethnic minorities as well as transgender and disabled people.

The decision was accepted by Hasina’s government. Even though the protesters have accepted the decision, they said the government is still answerable for the bloodshed that took place during the protests.

Top Headlines

Iran Warns Of Attack On US Tech Firms; Microsoft, Google Among 18 On Target List: 'Expect Destruction'
Microsoft, Google Among 18 On Iran's Target Over 'Targeted Assassination' Of Leaders
Trump Signals Imminent End To US Iran Operations, Says Exit Possible ‘Within Weeks’
Trump Signals Imminent End To US Iran Operations, Says Exit Possible ‘Within Weeks’
NYC Mayor Mamdani meets UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres during first visit to UNHQ
NYC Mayor Mamdani meets UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres during first visit to UNHQ
Systematically crushing Iran, forging alliances with important countries in West Asia: Netanyahu
Systematically crushing Iran, forging alliances with important countries in West Asia: Netanyahu

Videos

POLITICAL ACE: Former Tennis Star Leander Paes Joins BJP Ahead of Bengal Elections
GLOBAL CONFLICT: AI-Assisted Strikes Escalate US-Israel Attacks on Iran, 11 Dead in Mahallat
GLOBAL ALERT: Iran Threatens UAE as US Considers Ground Operation on Kharg Island
TRAGEDY ALERT: Nalanda Temple Stampede Claims 8 Lives Amid Mahavir Jayanti Crowds
War Update: UAE intercepts Iranian Shahed drones mid-air, video surfaces

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget