Anti-government protests turn deadly in Bangladesh
At least 14 people have been killed in Bangladesh as clashes erupted between police and anti-government protesters who are demanding that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina step down.
The latest round of tension comes as the student leaders have declared a civil disobedience campaign against the government.
Police have used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse demonstrators in several parts of Bangladesh. Dozens have been injured across the country.
In the capital, Dhaka, access to the internet on mobile devices has been suspended, with some providers telling local media they received orders from the government.
An official from the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) told BBC Bengali that 4G internet service in the Dhaka city area had stopped for now, but broadband services would continue.
Without 4G and 3G, people cannot communicate using the internet on their mobile devices. The source did not say when internet services would return to normal.
A curfew has been announced from 18:00 local time (noon GMT) on Sunday. According to local media reports, the curfew will be in place indefinitely.
Thousands of people gathered in a main square in the capital, and there have been violent incidents in other parts of the city.
In some places, supporters of the governing Awami League are said to be clashing with anti-government protesters.
“The whole city has turned into a battleground,” a policeman, who asked not to be named, told the AFP news agency. He said a crowd of several thousand protesters had set fire to cars and motorcycles outside a hospital.
Students Against Discrimination, a group behind the anti-government demonstrations, has called on the prime minister to step down.
The group announced a nationwide disobedience movement starting on Sunday, urging citizens not to pay taxes or any utility bills. The students have also called for shutting down all factories and public transport.
The protest that started with a demand to abolish quotas in civil service jobs last month has now turned into a wider anti-government movement.
More than 200 people were killed in the violence in July, many of them shot by police.
Around 10,000 people have been reportedly detained in a major crackdown by security forces in the past two weeks. Those arrested included opposition supporters and students.
The Awami League, Hasina’s party, is also holding marches across the country on Sundays.
The next few days are seen as crucial for both camps.
“Sheikh Hasina should not only resign; there should be a trial for the killings, looting, and corruption,” Nahid Islam, one of the student movement’s leaders, told thousands of people at a gathering on Saturday in Dhaka.
The protests pose a momentous challenge to Hasina, who was elected for a fourth consecutive term in the January elections, boycotted by the main opposition.
Students took to the streets last month over the reservation of many civil service jobs for relatives of the veterans of Bangladesh’s independence war with Pakistan in 1971.
Most of the quota has now been scaled back by the government following a government ruling, but students have continued to protest, demanding justice for those killed and injured. Now they want Hasina to step down.
Supporters of Hasina have ruled out her resignation.
Earlier, Hasina offered unconditional dialogue with the student leaders, saying she wanted the violence to end.
“I want to sit with the agitating students of the movement and listen to them. I want no conflict,” she said.
But the student protesters have rejected her offer.
Hasina called in the military last month to restore order after several police stations and state buildings were set on fire during the protests.
The Bangladeshi army chief, General Waker-Uz-Zaman, held a meeting with junior officers in Dhaka to assess the security situation.
“The Bangladesh Army has always stood by the people and will continue to do so for the interest of people and in any need of the state,” Gen. Zaman said, according to a release by the Inter-Services Public Relations Directorate.
The protests have restarted in several cities, and the government is struggling to control the rising tide of anger over how it initially responded to the demonstrations.
Bangladeshi media says most of those killed in last month’s protests were shot dead by police. Thousands were injured.
The government argues that police opened fire only in self-defence and to protect state properties.