Prime Minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina, has stepped down from her designated post, amid ongoing protest, and an interim government will run Bangladesh said the country’s Chief of Army Staff General Waqar-uz-Zaman on Monday.
According to reports, Hasina will be landing in India in search of a safe place. The report further suggested that she and her sister have left Gono Bhaban, her official residence.
Chef General Zaman conveyed his intention to the media saying the army of Bangladesh would create an interim government and even requested the protesters to establish order in the country.
PM Hasina and her sister, leaving her official residence in the country, Ganabhaban, flew in an army helicopter heading towards West Bengal, India, to ensure safety. The Bangladesh Army appears to be moving to oust, reportedly giving the Prime Minister a 45-minute ultimatum to step down. It was her fourth consecutive tenure as PM.
Gripping images of protesters vandalising a statue of Ms. Hasina’s father and the most towering leader in the country’s history, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who led it out from what was then East Pakistan into a nation independent from Pakistan, are playing out in Dhaka’s streets.
Protests in Bangladesh, which began last month, gathered steam as students launched an agitation against a reserved quota on government jobs for family members of those who fought in the country’s war of independence in 1971—30 percent of government jobs.
They want it scrapped, saying the system favors ruling Awami League supporters and that any selection should be based on the merit of the candidates. With the rise of protests, the Awami League administration tried to suppress it with utmost rigor. Over 300 defenders were killed in the confrontations.
Then, one comment by Prime Minister Hasina enraged the protesters even more. “If not the grandchildren of the freedom fighters, then who will receive quota benefits? The grandchildren of the ‘Razakars’?”. “This is my question. I put it across to the people in the country. If the demonstrators will not budge an inch, there is nothing I can do. They can continue with the demonstrations. But when they begin to destroy property and attack police officers, the law will follow its course. We can’t do anything.”
The term ‘Razakars’ touched a raw nerve. In the 1971 liberation war, Razakars, a paramilitary force raised by the Pakistan Army, was infamous for unmentionable atrocities like mass killings, rape, and torture.