Bangladesh share reform movement Army stationed amid rising death risk

Dhaka The Bangladesh Army executed a curfew in the thoroughfares of Dhaka on Saturday, July 20, as the movement against government job proportions led by scholars is turning decreasingly violent.
Bangladesh  share reform movement Army stationed amid rising death risk
Published on

A suspense of telecom services including internet and textbook dispatches has effectively cut off Bangladesh from the rest of the world. Overseas calls faced connectivity issues and utmost original news websites remained inactive.

The spiralling situation has injured thousands, reveals the data from hospitals across Bangladesh. The Dhaka Medical College Hospital entered 27 dead bodies between 5 pm and 7 pm.

The anti-discrimination pupil movement activists are protesting against the reservation share system that reserves 30 of government job openings for families of the country’s freedom fighters, which, the scholars say favours the sympathizers of the Awami league, the nation’s ruling party which led the independence movement.

The kick over the controversial proportions for government jobs turned violent after thepro-government Bangladesh Chhatra League and original police attacked the peacefully protesting anti-discrimination movement demonstrators before this month, preceding uninterrupted days of uneasiness in the country.

Over 700 Indian scholars return home Meanwhile, a aggregate of 778 Indian scholars have returned to India through colorful land anchorages. About 200 scholars have returned via Dhaka and Chittagong airfields, said the Ministry of External Affairs.

The High Commission and Assistant High Officers are in regular touch with further than 4000 Indian scholars who are stranded in universities across Bangladesh, the MEA’s added.

logo
The Democracy News
www.thedemocracynews.in