DHAKA, Bangladesh
At least 90 people
died Sunday after clashes between protesters, security
forces, and supporters of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's
government, in one of the deadliest days in Bangladesh since
anti-government demonstrations were sparked last month. Protesters attacked the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University hospital in Dhaka
The Interior Ministry declared
an indefinite nationwide curfew from 6 p.m. local time.
A student-led protest
movement began last month as a call to eliminate a controversial
quota system for public sector job recruitment, which the
Bangladesh Supreme Court has since scaled back. However, the protests have
since transformed into a broader anti-government movement.
Protesters returned to the
streets this week in huge numbers, in what has been characterized as
"non-cooperation" movement aimed at paralyzing the government and
demanding the prime minister's resignation.
Large groups of
protesters packed into Dhaka's central Shahbagh Square, with street battles
erupting at multiple locations in the capital as well as in other cities,
police said.
Protest organizers had
urged people not to pay taxes and utility bills and not show up for work
in a show of "non-cooperation" with the government.
Sunday is a working day in Bangladesh but many shops and banks in Dhaka stayed closed.
At one stage, thousands of
protesters attacked a major public hospital in Dhaka's Shahbagh area,
torching several vehicles, the police said.
A police officer, who asked
not to be named, told the French AFP news agency that "the whole city has
turned into a battleground."
In the capital's Uttara
neighborhood, police fired teargas to disperse hundreds of protesters who
blocked a major highway.
At least 91 people were
killed across the country, police and doctors said.
There are "at least
14 policemen" among those killed and 300 other officers wounded, police
spokesman Kamrul Ahsan said.
Also Sunday, the government
announced a holiday from Monday to Wednesday.
Courts were to be closed
indefinitely. Mobile internet service was cut off, and Facebook and messaging
apps, including WhatsApp, were inaccessible.
Hasina has accused the
protesters of carrying out "sabotage."
The United Nations' human
rights chief Volker Turk said Sunday that the "shocking violence" in
the South Asian country must stop.
He also urged the government
to stop targeting peaceful protesters.
"I appeal urgently to the
political leadership and to the security forces to abide by their obligations
to protect the right to life, and the freedom of peaceful assembly and
expression," Turk said.
"The government
must cease targeting those participating peacefully in the protest movement,
immediately release those arbitrarily detained, restore full Internet access,
and create conditions for meaningful dialogue," the UN official added.
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