Breaking news:- Bangladesh’s top court rolls back most government job quotas after violent protests……………….

 

Bangladesh’s top court rolls back most government job quotas after violent protests

 

<p>Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich has been found guilty of spying by a Russian court and sentenced to 16 years in prison following a trial that the US government, his newspaper and supporters have denounced as a sham. </p>

See the moment Evan Gershkovich is sentenced in Russian court

02:21

Mashco Piro Thumb.jpg

Rare footage shows uncontacted indigenous tribe in Peru

00:57

<p>CNN’s Amanda Davies heads to the athletics championships in Lviv and sits down with high jumper Kateryna Tabashnyk, who is staying the course despite personal tragedy.</p>

‘I wanted to give it all up’: Ukrainian athlete pushes through despite tragic loss

03:44

IMG_0017.jpg

Woman had part of her genitalia cut off as a baby. See how she fought to ban the practice

03:19

thumbnail.jpg

77 pilot whales die after being stranded on Scottish beach

00:48

thumbnail_kremlintvmp40.jpg

See Russian state media troll Biden’s NATO appearances

00:48

<p>CNN’s Jake Tapper sits down with United Kingdom’s newly-elected Prime Minister Keir Starmer to discuss his first Oval Office meeting with President Joe Biden. </p>

‘He was in good form’: UK prime minster on NATO meeting with Biden

01:23

still_20766646_8296.932_still.jpg

See moment Biden mistakenly calls Zelensky ‘President Putin’

01:53

still_20778207_2404917.333_still.jpg

WH official says ‘expect the worst out of Mr. Putin’

02:00

still_20760594_23409.694_still.jpg

Exclusive footage captures Russian-led saboteur in the act

03:33

thumbnail.jpg

Watch fire and smoke engulf Melbourne sky after chemical explosion

00:30

Japan rail robot1.png

See a Japanese railway use a humanoid robot for maintenance

00:35

 

 

People stand with a giant banner that reads “France is the fabric of migration” during an election night rally at Place de la Republique in Paris on July 7.

‘Huge uncertainty’: Expert explains what happens next after France’s vote

01:38See More Videos

CNN

Bangladesh’s Supreme Court on Sunday rolled back most of the controversial quotas on government jobs which sparked violent protests.

 

 

Under the quota system, some 30% of sought-after civil service jobs are reserved for relatives of veterans who fought in Bangladesh’s war of independence from Pakistan in 1971 – with many of the country’s contemporary political elite related to that generation.

 

Since the roles are linked to job security and higher pay, the quota system has angered many in the country, particularly students and young people, as Bangladesh faces high unemployment levels.

 

Dozens of people have reportedly been killed and hundreds injured in the violence, which saw demonstrators gather on streets and university campuses in the capital Dhaka and other cities.

 

In 2018, the civil service quota system was scrapped following similar protests but in June the High Court reinstated it, ruling its removal unconstitutional. On July 10, the Supreme Court suspended the quotas for one month while it took up the case.

 

 

On Sunday, the country’s top court dismissed the earlier ruling that brought back the quotas, directing that 93% of government jobs will be open to candidates on merit, without quotas.

 

Speaking to local media in Dhaka following the announcement, Shah Monjurul Hoque, a lawyer representing students said that the Supreme Court “gave a final solution to this quota system.”

 

“That is 93% quota for general people, 5% quota for freedom fighters and their kin, 1% for ethnic minority community, and 1% for third gender and physically disabled,” he said.

 

Bangladesh Attorney General A.M. Amin Uddin told Reuters, “I am hoping normalcy will return after today’s ruling and people with ulterior motives will stop instigating people,” noting that students “have clearly said they are in no way part of the violence and arson that have taken place in Bangladesh since Monday.”

 

“I will ask the government to find out the culprits behind the violence and take strict action against them,” he added.

 

Members of the Bangladesh Army sit on an armoured vehicle along with police during a curfew imposed in response to student-led protests against government job quotas in Dhaka on Saturday.

Members of the Bangladesh Army sit on an armoured vehicle along with police during a curfew imposed in response to student-led protests against government job quotas in Dhaka on Saturday. Anik Rahman/Reuters

Ahead of the ruling, Bangladesh on Sunday extended a curfew imposed on Friday to try to quell the violence and deployed soldiers to patrol the streets of the capital Dhaka, according to Reuters.

 

According to local media, the curfew was extended until after the Supreme Court hearing and will continue for an “uncertain time” following a two-hour break for people to gather supplies, Reuters reported.

 

CNN has tried to reach the prime minister’s office, home affairs ministry, and police, but mobile and internet services appear to remain mostly down across the country after a government-imposed blackout.

 

As of Saturday, internet monitoring site NetBlocks said activity had remained at around 10% for more than 48 hours since services were cut Thursday.

 

The US state department raised the travel advisory level for Bangladesh on Saturday, urging people to “not travel” due to “civil unrest, crime and terrorism.”

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*