Anti-DEI quota riots kill at least 16

All very sad.

I rather think that the consequences of over population combined with global warming are more likely to result in civil rather than world wars.
 
Bangladesh on edge as deadly day of violence kills at least 90

At least 90 people have been killed and hundreds more injured in clashes between police and anti-government protesters in Bangladesh

The unrest comes as student leaders have declared a campaign of civil disobedience to demand that the nation's long-serving leader Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step aside

The death toll includes at least 13 police officers, and an indefinite nationwide curfew has been put in place to curb further violence

Plans for the 'Long March to Dhaka'

Asif Mahmud, one of the key coordinators of the civil disobedience campaign, has outlined plans for today's planned demonstrations in Dhaka on Facebook.

He called on protesters to gather at 11:00 local time (05:00 GMT) at the Shaheed Minar, a national monument in the capital.

They will then walk to Shahbagh, where clashes broke out on Sunday - in what protesters have dubbed the "Long March to Dhaka".

Mr Mahmud added that Students Against Discrimination, a group behind the anti-government demonstrations, will hold a rally later today to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Hasina.

 

A quick update on what's happening​

If you're just joining us now, here's a quick look at what you need to know:

  • Bangladesh's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has resigned and fled the country, the BBC understands
  • Hasina, who has led Bangladesh since 2009, is onboard a helicopter heading to the Indian city of Agartala, according to BBC Bengali
  • Army chief General Waker-Uz-Zaman is set to address the nation, but his speech has already been delayed. He is said to be meeting with "stakeholders"
  • Hasina's resignation comes as thousands of protesters have taken to the streets in the capital Dhaka - with thousands more set to follow, a day after clashes between police and protesters left at least 90 people dead
  • Some demonstrators have reportedly stormed Hasina's official residence in Dhaka
  • Some 300 people have been killed over the past month as authorities have cracked down on anti-government protesters
  • The student protest started last month with peaceful demands to abolish quotas in civil service jobs, but have since transformed into a wider anti-government movement and nationwide unrest, calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
Stay with us as we bring you the latest on the ground.
https://www.bbc.com/news/live/ckdgg87lnkdt
 
PMs House

 
  • Hasina, who has led Bangladesh since 2009, is onboard a helicopter heading to the Indian city of Agartala, according to BBC Bengali

This understates the case as she first became PM in 1996. This isn't even the first time she had to flee the country under similar circumstances (mass protests against her + military intervention).

She has been alternating as PM with Khaleda Zia, leader of the opposition. Hasina is the daughter of Bangladesh's first PM who was killed in a coup, who earlier survived a genocide by the Pakistani military. Khaleda is the widow of one of the coup plotters, and has allied politically with apologists for the genocide. Needless to say this has created some tensions over the years. Hasina had essentially made it her mission to take revenge on people who wronged her father over the last three decades.

When she sided with the war veterans and their descendents over "razakars" (collaborators with the Pakistani army) I believe it was very personal. Hubris from years of unchecked power (Khaleda's party having boycotted recent elections) probably also explained the harshness of the response, as when the *first* protests against the quotas happened a few years ago she actually acceded to protesters' demands.
 
Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel laureate, tasked to lead Bangladesh out of crisis

Bangladesh’s Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has been asked to head the interim government in the wake of the political crisis that saw Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina flee the country on Monday.

Yunus, 84, who hailed the weeks-long student-led protests that brought down the Hasina government as a “Second Victory Day”, has been a critic of Hasina’s 15 years of iron-fisted rule.

“This is our beautiful country with lots of exciting possibilities. We must protect and make it a wonderful country for us and for our future generations,” Yunus told reporters.

The economist and entrepreneur takes over the reins of the country after one the deadliest protests in its history, which saw more than 300 killed and thousands arrested. Big challenges lie ahead as he has to establish law and order, revive the economy, and pave the way for free and fair elections.

Ahmed Ahsan, a former World Bank economist and a director of the Policy Research Institute in Bangladesh, says Yunus “is the man of the hour, chosen by the students who spearheaded the entire movement”.

“He commands enormous respect both in the country and in the world,” Ahsan told Al Jazeera.

‘Banker to the poor’

Yunus, the third of nine children, was born in 1940 in a village near the southern port city of Chittagong in what was then East Pakistan.

During the 1971 liberation war against the Pakistani military, Yunus supported efforts to create an independent Bangladesh. He founded a citizens’ committee in the US city of Nashville and helped run the Bangladesh Information Center in Washington, DC, which lobbied the US Congress to stop military aid to Pakistan.

In 1972, Yunus returned to an independent Bangladesh, and after a brief spell in the country’s new Planning Commission, joined the economics department of the University of Chittagong.

In 1976, he visited nearby villages in Chittagong that were affected by famines a few years earlier as part of his field work at the university. Yunus lent 42 people in the village $27 and found that each of them paid the money back as scheduled.

He found out that small loans or microcredits given to poor villagers made a huge difference. Traditional banks would not lend them money, forcing them to rely on unscrupulous money lenders who charged exorbitant interest rates.

This was the beginning of Grameen Bank (village bank) which pioneered the provision of microcredit to poor people to allow them to start up new businesses. Yunus became known as the “banker to the poor” as he helped lift millions out of poverty through his Grameen Bank.

In 2006, Yunus and Grameen Bank were together awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their work to “create economic and social development from below”.

By that time, the bank had lent more than $7bn to over seven million borrowers, 97 percent of them women, with a repayment rate of nearly 100 percent.

“I see poor people are getting out of poverty every day … we can see that we can create a poverty-free world… where the only place we’ll see poverty will be in the museums, poverty museums,” Yunus said at the time.

On Hasina’s target

Yunus became the target of Hasina’s ire after he floated the idea of launching a political party in 2007.

Yunus’s initial idea of launching the party came against the backdrop of the failure of the two main parties – Hasina’s Awami League and the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) – to address rampant corruption and rising income inequality.

In 2011, Hasina, who perceived the then-71-year-old respected economist as a political threat, removed Yunus from his position as managing director of Grameen Bank, calling him a “bloodsucker” of the poor. Her government subsequently launched financial investigations into his non-profit businesses. Last year, he was convicted for violating labour laws, and he has been subject to an ongoing corruption case that many consider bogus.

 
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