Five killed and dozens injured in clashes over jobs quota system in Bangladesh
Protesters were demanding an end to a quota system that reserves government jobs for family members of veterans who fought in the war of independence.
At least five people have been killed and dozens injured in two separate incidents in Bangladesh as violence continued on university campuses in the nation’s capital and elsewhere over a government jobs quota scheme, local media reports said quoting officials.
At least three of the dead were students and one was a pedestrian, the media reports said. Another man who died in Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka, remained unidentified.
The deaths were reported on Tuesday following overnight violence at a public university near Dhaka.
The violence involved members of a pro-government student body and other students, when police fired tear gas and charged the protesters with batons during the clashes which spread at Jahangir Nagar University in Savar, outside Dhaka, according to students and authorities.
They argue that quota appointments are discriminatory and should be merit-based. Some even said the current system benefits groups supporting Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Some Cabinet ministers criticised the protesters, saying they played on students’ emotions.
The Bengali-language Prothom Alo daily reported that one person died in Dhaka and three others, including a pedestrian, were killed after they suffered injuries during violence in Chattogram, a south-eastern district, on Tuesday.
Prothom Alo and other media reports also said that a 22-year-old protester died in the northern district of Rangpur.
Details of the casualties could not be confirmed immediately.
While job opportunities have expanded in Bangladesh’s private sector, many find government jobs stable and lucrative. Each year, some 3,000 such jobs open up to nearly 400,000 graduates.
Ms Hasina said on Tuesday that war veterans — commonly known as “freedom fighters” — should receive the highest respect for their sacrifice in 1971 regardless of their current political ideologies.
Protesters gathered in front of the university’s official residence of the vice-chancellor early Tuesday when violence broke out.
Demonstrators accused the Bangladesh Chhatra League, a student wing of Ms Hasina’s ruling Awami League party, of attacking their “peaceful protests”. According to local media reports, police and the ruling party-backed student wing attacked the protesters.
But Abdullahil Kafi, a senior police official, told the country’s leading English-language newspaper the Daily Star that they fired tear gas and “blank rounds” as protesters attacked the police. He said up to 15 police officers were injured.
More than 50 people were treated at Enam Medical College Hospital near Jahangir Nagar University as the violence continued for hours, said Ali Bin Solaiman, a medical officer at the hospital. He said at least 30 of them suffered pellet wounds.
On Monday, violence also spread at Dhaka University, the country’s leading public university, as clashes gripped the campus in the capital. More than 100 students were injured in the clashes, police said.
On Tuesday, protesters blocked railways and some roads across the country, and in Dhaka, they halted traffic in many areas as they vowed to continue demonstrating until the demands were met.
Protesters say they are apolitical, but leaders of the ruling parties accused the opposition of using the demonstrations for political gains.
The family of veterans quota system was halted following a court order after mass student protests in 2018. But last month Bangladesh’s High Court annulled the decision to reinstall the system once more, angering scores of students and triggering protests.
Last week, the Supreme Court halted the High Court’s order for four weeks and the chief justice asked protesting students to return to their classes, saying the court would issue a decision in four weeks. Meanwhile, the prime minister said the matter is in the hands of the Supreme Court now.
But the protests have continued daily, halting traffic in Dhaka.
The quota system also reserves government jobs for women, disabled people and ethnic minority groups, but students have only protested against jobs reserved for veterans’ families.
Ms Hasina maintained power in an election in January that was again boycotted by the country’s main opposition party and its allies due to her refusal to step down and hand over power to a caretaker government to oversee the election.
Her party favours keeping the quota for the families of the 1971 war heroes after her Awami League party, under the leadership of her father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, led the independence war with the help of India. Mr Rahman was assassinated along with most members of his family in a military coup in 1975.
In 1971, the Jamaat-e-Islami party, which shared power with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party led by Ms Hasina’s archrival, former prime minister Khaleda Zia in 2001-2006, openly opposed the independence war and formed groups that helped the Pakistani military fight pro-independence forces.
All the major political parties in Bangladesh have student wings that are active across the South Asian nation.