Bangladeshis Cling To Protest Dreams A Year After Revolution
The memory of Bangladeshi police with shotguns twice blasting the young protester beside him still haunts Hibzur Rahman Prince, one year after a revolution that has left the country mired in turmoil.
That killing, along with up to 1,400 others as Sheikh Hasina tried to cling to power last year, overshadows Bangladesh as political parties jostle for power.
Prince shuddered as he recalled how the student's bleeding body collapsed at his feet.
"His body was lacerated," said Prince, who helped carry him to hospital.
Medics told him that "400 pellets were taken from his dead body".
Protests began on July 1, 2024 with university students calling for reforms to a quota system for public sector jobs.
Initially their demands seemed niche.
Many in the country of around 170 million people were worn down by the tough grind of economic woes.
Student ambitions to topple Hasina's iron-fisted rule seemed a fantasy, just months after she won her fourth consecutive election in a vote without genuine opposition.
One week into the demonstrations she said the students........
© International Business Times
