DHAKA, Bangladesh
A key organizer of Bangladesh’s student protests said Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus was their choice as head of an interim government a day after longtime Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina resigned.
The country’s figurehead
president and the military chief said Monday that an interim government would
be formed soon.
Nahid Islam, the organizer, in
a video post in social media said the student protest leaders have already
talked with Yunus, who consented to take over considering the present situation
of the country.
Yunus, who called Hasina’s
resignation the country’s “second liberation day,” faced a number of corruption
accusations and was put on trial during the former prime minister’s rule. He
received the Nobel in 2006 after he pioneered microlending, and he said the
corruption charges against him were motivated by vengeance.
Islam said the student
protesters would announce more names for the government, and it would be a
difficult challenge for the current leadership to ignore their choices.
Hasina resigned and fled the
country Monday after weeks of protests against a quota system for government
jobs descended into violence and grew into a broader challenge to her 15-year
rule. Thousands of demonstrators stormed her official residence and other
buildings associated with her party and family.
Her departure threatened to
create even more instability in the densely populated South Asian nation that
is already dealing with a series of crises, from high unemployment to
corruption to climate change. Amid security concerns, the main airport in Dhaka,
the capital, suspended operations.
Violence just before and after
her resignation left at least 109 people dead and hundreds of others injured,
according to media reports, which could not be independently confirmed.
More than a dozen were
reportedly killed when protesters set fire to a hotel owned by a leader in
Hasina’s party in the southwestern town of Jashore. More violence at Savar,
just outside Dhaka, at least 25 people died, the reports said. Another 10
people died in Dhaka’s Uttara neighborhood.
The military chief, Gen.
Waker-uz-Zamam said he was temporarily taking control of the country, and
soldiers tried to stem the growing unrest.
Mohammed Shahabuddin, the
country’s figurehead president, announced late Monday after meeting with
Waker-uz-Zamam and opposition politicians that Parliament would be dissolved
and a national government would be formed as soon as possible, leading to fresh
elections.
Speaking after the embattled
leader was seen in television footage boarding a military helicopter with her
sister, Waker-uz-Zaman sought to reassure a jittery nation that order would be
restored. Experts, though, warned the road ahead would be long.
The main opposition Bangladesh
Nationalist Party Tuesday urged people to exercise restraint in what it said
was a “transitional moment on our democratic path.”
“It would defeat the spirit of
the revolution that toppled the illegitimate and autocratic regime of Sheikh
Hasina if people decide to take the law into their own hands without due
process,” Tarique Rahman, the party’s acting chairman, wrote on the social
media platform X.
In a statement Monday, the
United Nation’s human rights chief, Volker Türk, said the transition of power
in Bangladesh must be “in line with the country’s international obligations”
and “inclusive and open to the meaningful participation of all Bangladeshis.”
Hundreds of thousands of
people poured into the streets waving flags and cheering to celebrate Hasina’s
resignation. But some celebrations soon turned violent, with protesters
attacking symbols of her government and party, ransacking and setting fires in
several buildings.
“This is not just the end of
the tyrant Sheikh Hasina, with this we put an end to the mafia state that she
has created,” declared Sairaj Salekin, a student protester, on the streets of
Dhaka.
Protests began peacefully last
month as frustrated students demanded an end to a quota system for government
jobs that they said favored those with connections to the prime minister’s
Awami League party.
But amid a deadly crackdown,
the demonstrations morphed into an unprecedented challenge to Hasina,
highlighting the extent of economic distress in Bangladesh, where exports have
fallen and foreign exchange reserves are running low.
Waker-uz-Zaman promised that
the military would investigate a crackdown that had left nearly 300 people dead
since mid-July, some of the country’s worst bloodshed since the 1971 war of
independence, and which had fueled outrage against the government.
Nearly 100 people, including
14 police officers, were killed Sunday, according to the country’s leading
Bengali-language daily newspaper, Prothom Alo. At least 11,000 people have been
arrested in recent weeks.
“Keep faith in the military.
We will investigate all the killings and punish the responsible,” he said.
The military wields
significant political influence in Bangladesh, which has faced more than 20
coups or coup attempts since independence in 1971.
But it was not clear if
Hasina’s resignation or the military chief’s calls for calm would be enough to
end the turmoil.
Throughout the day, people
continued to pour into and out of Hasina’s official residence, where they set
fires, carried out furniture and pulled raw fish from the refrigerators.
They also massed outside the
parliament building, where a banner reading “justice” was hung.
Crowds also ransacked Hasina’s
family’s ancestral home-turned-museum where her father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman —
the country’s first president and independence leader — was assassinated. They
torched major offices of the ruling party and two pro-government TV stations,
forcing both to go off air.
Hasina, meanwhile, landed at a
military airfield near New Delhi on Monday after leaving Dhaka and met India’s
National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, the Indian Express newspaper reported.
The report said Hasina was
taken to a safe house and is likely to travel to the United Kingdom.
The 76-year-old was elected
for a fourth consecutive term in a January vote that was boycotted by her main
opponents.
Thousands of opposition
members were jailed before the polls, and the US and the UK denounced the
result as not credible, though the government defended it.
Hasina had cultivated ties
with powerful countries, including both neighboring India and China. But
relations with United States and other Western nations have been strained over
lost civic freedoms in the predominantly Muslim nation of 170 million people.
Her political opponents have
previously accused her of growing increasingly autocratic and have blamed the
unrest on that authoritarian streak.
In total, she served more than
20 years, longer than any other female head of government.
Hasina’s son, Sajeeb Wazed
Joy, told the BBC that he doubted his mother would make a political comeback,
as she has in the past, saying she was “so disappointed after all her hard
work.”
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