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Bangladesh
AsiaSouth Asia

Bangladesh court winds back job quotas that sparked unrest

  • The ruling curtails the number of reserved jobs, from 56 per cent of all positions to 7 per cent, but falls short of meeting protester demands

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Members of the Bangladesh Army in Dhaka enforcing a curfew imposed in response to student protests against government job quotas. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

Bangladesh’s top court on Sunday pared back contentious civil service hiring rules but failed to mollify university student leaders, whose demonstrations against the scheme sparked nationwide clashes that have killed 151 people.

What began as a protest against politicised admission quotas for sought-after government jobs snowballed this week into some of the worst unrest of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s tenure.

Soldiers are patrolling cities across Bangladesh after riot police failed to restore order, while a nationwide internet blackout since Thursday has drastically restricted the flow of information to the outside world.

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The Supreme Court was due to decide next month on the legality of the recently reintroduced scheme that reserves more than half of government jobs for select applicants, but brought forward its verdict as the civil strife intensified.

It decided that a lower bench’s order last month to reintroduce the scheme was “illegal”, said Bangladeshi Attorney General A.M. Amin Uddin.

Students clash with police during a protest over the quota system in public service, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Friday. Photo: AP
Students clash with police during a protest over the quota system in public service, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Friday. Photo: AP

Shah Monjurul Hoque, a lawyer involved in the case, said the court had also asked protesting students “to return to class” after issuing its verdict.

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