Bangladesh's student protestors are now helping to run the country - podcast episode cover

Bangladesh's student protestors are now helping to run the country

Aug 20, 20248 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:

Episode description

Earlier this month, student protestors filled the streets of Dhaka, Bangladesh, in opposition to a controversial quota system for government jobs.

Authorities then cracked down on demonstrators, blocking internet access, imposing a curfew and issuing police officers a shoot-on-sight order. In just over a month, more than 600 people have been killed.

And as the protests escalated, the demonstrations started to become about much more than just the quota system.

Eventually, students were able to force Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to resign.

The students who ousted Hasina are now helping to lead Bangladesh.

"We youth are not only the generation of Facebook, YouTube and Instagram," says 19-year-old protestor Mumtahana Munir Mitti.

"We also love our country. And we also love to participate in [the] rebuilding of our country."

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at [email protected].

Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices

NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript

There's never been a summer quite like this in Bangladesh. In a few short months, the country's future has transformed. In July, student protestors took to the streets and led demonstrations against a controversial quota system for government jobs. Demonstrators said the quota system favored people with connections to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasena's party. Authorities began to crack down on protesters, the government blocked internet and mobile access, police imposed a curfew

and a shoot on site order. What started out as peaceful protests escalated into violence, in just over a month more than 600 people have been killed. The demonstrations soon were about much more than job quotas. They became a movement to ousht Sheikh Hasena. The quota was really the tip of the iceberg. It could have been dealt with, but once it wasn't, then the whole Tinder box exploded. That is Shahid al-Alam, a photojournalist,

writer and activist based in Dhaka, the capital. As unrest in the country continued, on August 4th, almost 100 people were killed in a police crackdown, causing outrage. And just a day later, Hasena was forced to resign. She fled the country, protesters overran her residents. 19-year-old Manta Ham Nier-Miti has been painting revolutionary murals all over Dhaka, and she says her generation was long dismissed.

We youth are not only the generation of Facebook, YouTube and Instagram. We also love our country and we also love to participate in rebuilding of our country. Consider this from the classroom to the government. The same students who ousted the Prime Minister are now helping lead Bangladesh. We'll speak to one of them about the country's future. From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang. This message comes from NPR sponsor Comedy Central's The Daily Show, reminding you that not all

elections are created equal. Some are much, much worse than others. The political climate may be hotter than ever, but John Stewart and The Daily Show News team are barely breaking a sweat as they make sense of political nonsense every weeknight. Comedy Central's The Daily Show, continuing 2024 election coverage, weeknights at 11 on Comedy Central. Support for this NPR podcast and the

following message come from Carvana, the convenient way to buy a car online. Carvana has finance options so you can customize your terms down to the penny or explore different down and monthly payment options. Get pre-qualified for an auto loan in under two minutes at Carvana.com. The Constitution, our founding document, says a lot about how our country has evolved and who we want to be, but it's not set in stone. So for the next month, we'll be taking into the history behind

some of its most pivotal amendments. Listen to We The People on the Thurline podcast from NPR. It's considered this from NPR. Bangladesh has a new interim leader in Nobel laureate Muhammad Unis and many who have joined his government are the very students who led the historic demonstrations leading to the ouster of Sheikh Hasina. Earlier this month, NAHED Islam was a sociology graduate student at the University of Dhaka. Now he is leading two ministries

within Bangladesh's interim government. He is minister of posts, telecommunications and IT, and he is minister of information and broadcasting. I have to ask you, just a few weeks ago, you were in the middle of getting your master's degree, you're 26 years old, right? And now you are helping lead your country's interim government. What have the last two weeks been like for you? It feels good to me, but we have lost our brothers and sisters. They are martyred by

fascist regime and many people are still injured. I am visiting the hospitals. I am visiting the family of martyres and I have responsibilities on my shoulder to reconstruct the country and the regular activities are also going on. Let me ask you, when Sheikh Hasina was still in power, you were arrested, you have said that you were tortured by that government. So what does it feel like now to see her gone and now to be part of the group of people leading Bangladesh?

I feel like a free man. I feel that I have the freedom now. I have the human dignity. I feel that I have the human rights now. And Sheikh Hasina's government was an authoritarian and fascist government. And now a free moment has created in Bangladesh and I can breathe in the fear of Bangladesh. The free air of Bangladesh. And I know that you're joining me for this interview from Bangladesh. It's past midnight over there. It sounds like your days have been extremely long. Can you just walk us

through one of your typical days as a minister of two different ministries? Yes, it is a difficult time for me. I have to work 16 hours in a day, but I have to work for our youth and the future and the truth and the justice. And can I ask why are you leading two ministries instead of just one? Because in the interior government, the members are only 17 or 18 and there are many ministries and there are also many advisors who also have to take two or three ministries.

Wow. So you're not the only one in the interim government who is doing more than one job at the time? Yes. Well, an interim government is not exactly meant to enact new policies because you are not elected officials. So what are you hoping to accomplish before your country holds elections? Yes, we want a new political settlement which will pep the way for democratic transition,

party democracy and rule of law. We also envision for reconstructing the constitution, our constitution is one-man's intrigue and the prime minister has all of the power, maximum of the power. So we have to reform the constitution, we have to reform the election commissions and we have to eradicate corruptions. We have to reconstruct the country system and government

system first. Then we can go for an election. There are concerns about this interim government being run by young people who don't have a lot of political experience, young people like yourself. How do you respond to those concerns? We represented the people, we the student laid the movement and the revolution, the political forces, existing forces of Bangladesh failed. As a student can lead a movement, lead a revolution, a student can also form a government, can also lead the government.

Well, Minister Islam, if we called you back in one year from today, tell me what you hope you could tell us about Bangladesh at that point in the future. The future Bangladesh I want to see a democratic Bangladesh and party democracy in the rule of law and justice and we also say that we want a new political settlement in Bangladesh. That was Nahid Islam, a minister in the interim government of Bangladesh. This episode was produced by Janaki Mehta and Brianna Scott. It was edited

by Justine Kenan and PR International correspondent Diyahadi, contributed reporting. Our executive producer is Salmi Yenigan. It's considered this for MNPR. I'm Elsa Chang. This summer on Planet Money, we're bringing you the entire history of the world. At least the economics part. It's Planet Money Summer School. Every week we'll invite in a brilliant professor and play classic episodes about the birth of money, banks and finance. There will be rogues and

revolutionaries and a lot of panics. Summer School, every Wednesday till Labor Day on the Planet Money Podcast from NPR. Okay, so tell me if this sounds like you. You love NPR's podcasts. You wish they weren't interrupted by sponsor breaks like this one and you want to support NPR's mission of creating a more informed public. If this does sound like you, then it's time to sign up for perks across more than 20 podcasts with the NPR plus bundle. Learn more at plus.npr.org.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.