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Bangladesh Rolls Back Gov’t Job Quota Rule Following Student Protests That Killed at Least 160

HeadlineJul 22, 2024

In Bangladesh, the government rolled back, but stopped short of abolishing, its highly contested quota system for public sector jobs, after massive student protests that killed 160 demonstrators amid a brutal crackdown. This is a lawyer for the students.

Shah Monjurul Hoque: “The Supreme Court, according to Article 104, gave a final solution to this quota system. That is 93% quota for general people, 5% quota for freedom fighters and their kin, 1% for the ethnic minority community and 1% for third gender and physically disabled.”

Over 500 others have been arrested since Bangladesh’s High Court reinstated the quota last month, which reserved up to 30% of the coveted government positions for the relatives of soldiers who fought in Bangladesh’s independence war against Pakistan in 1971. But students are vowing to resume the now-suspended protests until the new rule is implemented, a curfew fully lifted, schools reopened, and detained students and protest leaders released. In response to the student uprising, the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina ordered the army to use deadly force against protesters and imposed a nationwide curfew and a communications blackout.

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