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Quota Reform Movement: What UN Report Reveals

Rtv news

  17 Aug 2024, 12:39
Photo: Collected

The United Nations released a report stating that there are serious and credible allegations of 'unnecessary' and 'excessive' use of force against law and order forces in Bangladesh for suppressing protests surrounding the quota reform movement.

The report was released by the World Peace Organization on Friday (August 16). NDTV news.

According to the report, the former Prime Minister of Bangladesh was in power for more than 15 years. At the beginning of last July, protests started around the quota reform movement. This protest eventually led to a one-point demand for Sheikh Hasina's resignation. Sheikh Hasina was forced to oust on August 5. More than 450 people have been killed in protests over the past few weeks. During this time, the security forces used 'unnecessary' and
'excessive' force to control the situation.

It also said that law enforcement forces used extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests and detentions, enforced disappearances, torture and ill-treatment of activists and severe restrictions on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly to suppress the quota reform movement. In this situation, the United Nations emphasized to restore law and order in Bangladesh quickly. It also emphasized to prevent further loss of life, violence and reprisals in the country.

It should be noted that Sheikh Hasina resigned from the post of Prime Minister on August 5 due to public outcry and fled to India. Then on August 8, the Interim government was formed and headed by Nobel Prize winning economist Dr Muhammad Yunus.
Currently this interim government of 21 members rulling the country. The interim government invited the United Nations to investigate all the violence surrounding quota reform movement.

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