
Protests grip Bangladesh as pressure mounts on Yunus-led government
Primary schoolteachers in
Bangladesh
joined public sector workers in protests against the interim government on Monday amid growing discontent and political uncertainty in the south Asian country.
Nobel peace laureate Muhammad Yunus (84)
took over as interim head
of the country of 173 million last August after deadly student-led protests forced then prime minister Sheikh Hasina to
flee to India
.
Mr Yunus's administration has faced pressure from civil servants, teachers, political parties and the military as the caretaker government attempts to guide the country through a fragile transition before holding a general election.
The government issued an ordinance on Sunday allowing the Ministry of Public Administration to dismiss public servants for misconduct without lengthy procedures, sparking outrage across the bureaucracy.
READ MORE
Government employees continued their demonstrations for a third consecutive day on Monday, calling the ordinance 'repressive' and demanding its immediate withdrawal.
Thousands of teachers in government primary schools also began indefinite leave from work on Monday, demanding a hike in wages.
In the face of protests by the employees of National Board of Revenue, the interim government was forced on Sunday to withdraw an order to dissolve the tax body and replace it with two divisions under the finance ministry. The strike was then called off.
Political uncertainty also deepened last week after a top student leader said Mr Yunus had said he could step down if political parties could not agree on reforms and an election timeline.
Wahiduddin Mahmud, the planning adviser in Mr Yunus's cabinet, however, said the de facto prime minister was not quitting.
'We are not going anywhere till our job is done,' Mr Mahmud said during the weekend, adding that Yunus acknowledged the obstacles but remained committed to holding a fair election.
The interim government has been caught between competing demands for swift general elections and reforms. Mr Yunus has said the elections could be held by June, 2026 while the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), led by former prime minister Khaleda Zia, has been pushing for polls by December.
Bangladesh's army chief, Gen Waker-Uz-Zaman, added to the pressure by calling for elections to be held in December during a speech last week, expressing his dissatisfaction over the political situation.
Mr Yunus convened a last-minute meeting of his advisory council on Saturday and also held talks during the weekend with the country's main political forces, including the BNP, Jamaat-e-Islami, and the student-led National Citizen Party.
Leaders of other political parties also met Mr Yunus.
'We are in a war-like situation,' Mr Yunus's press secretary Shafiqul Alam told reporters on Sunday. 'After the Awami League's activities were banned, attempts are on to destabilise us in various ways. We have to get out of this situation.'
The registration of Sheikh Hasina's Awami League party was suspended this month, effectively barring the party from contesting the next election. − Reuters
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
3 days ago
- Irish Times
The Encampments review: Taut, disciplined documentary about Palestine protests at Columbia University
The Encampments Director : Kei Pritsker, Michael T Workman Cert : 12A Starring : Sueda Polat, Mahmoud Khalil, Grant Miner, Naye idriss, Bisan Owda, Ali Abunimah, Layan Fuleihan, Jamal Joseph Running Time : 1 hr 20 mins This fine documentary on the Palestine solidarity encampments at Columbia University, in Manhattan, makes much of comparisons with student protests against the Vietnam War in the late 1960s. We are reminded that the mainstream United States was not then much impressed with the students' actions. (A significant majority of those polled blamed the students themselves for the National Guard's killing of protesters at Kent State.) Over time, however, sympathy eventually drifted the way of the anti-war movement. 'Why do you think these encampments caused such an intense response from some of the most powerful people in the world?' the current film begins. We cut to Mike Johnson, speaker of the US House of Representatives, decrying 'radical, extreme ideologies'. Senator Tom Cotton then argues that 'these little Gazas are disgusting cesspools of anti-Semitic hate'. It all feels startlingly familiar – right down to the use of 'freaks', a very 1960s word, to describe the protesters. Sueda Polat, a graduate student at the heart of the movement, calmly notes widespread reluctance in the US media to engage with the continuing slaughter in Palestine. Yelling at students is a heck of a lot easier. Nobody would mistake The Encampments for an unaligned documentary. Kei Pritsker and Michael T Workman, reporting from the heart of the protest, structure their film around three key participants. Mahmoud Khalil , who acted as liaison between students and the university, later found himself arrested by the US immigration agency. Grant Miner, involved in the occupation of the college's Hamilton Hall, was subsequently expelled from Columbia. Along with Polat, those two, addressing the camera directly, provide a sober and reasoned defence for a campaign that, among other things, asked the Ivy League institution to divest from companies with ties to the Israeli government. READ MORE Counterarguments are sparse, mostly represented by spittle-flecked politicians and fulminating right-wing media. Fair enough. There is an honourable tradition of film-makers anchoring themselves to one core perspective – and, as the opening of the film clarifies, contradictory takes are available all day and every day. The Encampments may win over few hostile to the college occupations, but it offers an important record of how the campaign developed. Pritsker and Workman lay out the story in taut, disciplined fashion. There is no flash to the documentary – no animation, no re-enactments, no show-off montages. We learn about the demands for divestment. We hear how, after requests are ignored, students set up camps on the lawns. What seems to have set the Columbia occupation apart was the authorities' decision to allow the police in to arrest students. The directors get their camera in among the rough and tumble. The key difference between documentaries on the 1960s protests and those today is, of course, to do with technology. The students are wired in to one another and to the wider worlds with social media. The directors have equipment that can go anywhere (and that never runs out of film). [ Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat: A fleet-footed chronicle that never lets up Opens in new window ] Pritsker and Workman are able to inveigle an extraordinary amount of information into an economic running time. We get close into the students' faces. We learn how they fed themselves. We get a sense of the movement spreading out to the rest of the United States and the rest of the world. It's a raw, bald film, but one that never loses its focus. What the world ultimately comes to think of the protests and of this film depends on events in the Middle East. But the cases of Miner and Khalil confirm that those behind the barricades had – and still have – much at stake. This is no game. 'We are just getting started,' one protester says towards the close. 'We have a cause we believe in and we are going to fight until the end.' In cinemas from Friday, June 6th


Irish Times
4 days ago
- Irish Times
Mongolian prime minister resigns after losing backing of parliament
Mongolia prime minister Luvsannamsrai Oyun-Erdene has stepped down after losing parliamentary support following corruption claims that erupted into street protests last month, the country's parliament said on Tuesday. The parliament of the world's largest landlocked country did not pass a draft resolution on a confidence ballot, meaning Mr Oyun-Erdene was deemed to have resigned, noted a parliament statement. 'It was an honour to serve my country and people in difficult times, including pandemics, wars, and tariffs,' said Mr Oyun-Erdene after the result of the vote became known. Mr Oyun-Erdene, who has been prime minister since January 2021 and was re-elected in July 2024, will remain caretaker PM until a successor is named within 30 days. READ MORE The political upheaval comes after Mongolians last month protested for weeks in the capital Ulan Bator, alleging corruption involving Mr Oyun-Erdene and his family. Mr Oyun-Erdene did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment on his resignation and the corruption allegations. A statement posted on the Mongolian parliament website showed Mr Oyun-Erdene thanking the country's youth for their views on transparency, and citizens for their different perspectives, but said he 'regrets that this is used as a political pretext and causing instability'. Mr Oyun-Erdene argued he had been steadfast in fighting corruption but had focused too much on large projects instead of social and political issues. The outgoing prime minister had pushed for infrastructure and resource development projects in the mineral-rich country, outlining 14 mega-projects including mineral processing centres, water diversion initiatives, dams and power plants. – Reuters


Irish Times
27-05-2025
- Irish Times
Secondary schools to get extra funding to aid roll-out of controversial Leaving Cert reforms
Secondary schools will receive a multi-million euro package of funding for science equipment and laboratories to support the roll-out of controversial Leaving Cert reforms from September. The development comes as second-level teachers are being balloted by unions over whether to back a support package for senior cycle changes or vote for industrial action. The latter option could lead to disruption of schools in the autumn. The reforms will see students awarded a minimum of 40 per cent for project work or practicals across all subjects. The move is aimed at broadening assessment and easing pressure on students. Teaching unions' annual conferences at Easter heard concerns that laboratories were ill-equipped for the volume of new research projects for physics, chemistry and biology. It was also stated that the changes would benefit affluent schools with access to more resources. READ MORE In a statement, a Department of Education spokeswoman said dedicated science funding for students taking Leaving Cert physics and chemistry will rise from the current rate of €13 per student to €25 per student. From the next academic year, schools will also receive this grant for students enrolled in the subjects of biology and agricultural science. This will see approximately €3 million invested in science subjects as part of senior cycle redevelopment. An additional €5 million will also be allocated this year for the modernisation of equipment in school science labs. A spokeswoman for the Department said this means that in the year from December 2024, almost €20 million will be invested in science subjects and laboratories. This figure includes funding of between €13,000 and €24,200 for individual schools, based on the number of students studying science subjects. In the coming days, teaching unions will complete their ballot of members over a wider support package for the roll-out of Leaving Cert reforms. The package clarifies that pay increases of up to 5 per cent, due under the public sector pay deal, are contingent on co-operating with senior cycle reforms. It also offers pledges of flexibility in relation to so-called Croke Park hours and a shorter qualifying period for teachers to attain job permanency by way of a contract of indefinite duration. In the event that the package is rejected and there is support for industrial action, the possibility of strikes will loom in the autumn. The Teachers' Union of Ireland (TUI), which has recommended that members back the support package, is due to announce the outcome of its ballot on Friday evening. The Association of Secondary Teachers Ireland (ASTI), which has not issued a recommendation to members, is expected to announce the outcome of its ballot next week. Minister for Education Helen McEntee has said the reforms are 'in the best interest of students'. Speaking recently, she said: 'It will help to reduce the pressure faced by students, while recognising a broader range of skills and ensuring that students have the skills necessary to thrive and succeed in a rapidly changing world.' A spokeswoman said Ms McEntee was 'committed to ensuring that students and teachers have the necessary resources to ensure that all students can benefit from senior cycle redevelopment'. Both the TUI and ASTI's annual conferences heard criticism of the planned changes, especially from science teachers, who are argue that the changes will threaten standards and undermine academic integrity. Many said the cheating threat posed by AI tools such as ChatGPT meant teachers would struggle to authenticate their students' work.