Abu Sayed, a 23-year-old student from Begum Rokeya University, Rangpur (BRUR) whose killing by police on July 16 fuelled the anti-discrimination student protests, has posthumously passed his honours final examinations.
In Bangladesh, inequality starts with education.
Bangladesh’s young footballers dedicated their first goal against Sri Lanka in their first match of the SAFF U-20 Championship in Kathmandu today to the martyrs of the student protesters, who laid down their lives during the recent quota movement which eventually culminated in the ouster of the Sheikh Hasina-government.
Their deaths in the hands of cold-blooded law enforcement personnel might not have been in vain
There is a serious governance failure in dealing with the student demands for merit-based recruitment system in Bangladesh’s government jobs.
Abu Sayed, a 23-year-old student from Begum Rokeya University, Rangpur (BRUR) whose killing by police on July 16 fuelled the anti-discrimination student protests, has posthumously passed his honours final examinations.
In Bangladesh, inequality starts with education.
Bangladesh’s young footballers dedicated their first goal against Sri Lanka in their first match of the SAFF U-20 Championship in Kathmandu today to the martyrs of the student protesters, who laid down their lives during the recent quota movement which eventually culminated in the ouster of the Sheikh Hasina-government.
Their deaths in the hands of cold-blooded law enforcement personnel might not have been in vain
There is a serious governance failure in dealing with the student demands for merit-based recruitment system in Bangladesh’s government jobs.