Bangladesh: New Student Protests Turn Violent

Above: Police fire tear gas shells to stop the protesters near Dhanmondi 27 on July 18, 2024 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Image copyright: Parvez Ahmad Rony/Drik/Contributor/Getty Images News via Getty Images

The Facts

  • Demonstrators hit the streets of Dhaka, Bangladesh Wednesday to protest the deaths and detainment of others who protested civil service hiring quotas earlier this month. Over 200 people have been killed and almost 10K arrested as protesters have clashed with police.

  • The death toll rose on Thursday after a 31-year-old man succumbed to his injuries after suffering 56 pellet wounds in the chest and 18 in his head. His family said he was caught between police and protesters on July 18 while walking to work.


The Spin

Pro-establishment narrative

Lethal police crackdowns and mass arrests are oppressive tools that Sheikh Hasina has used throughout her 15 years in power. Not only did Hasina deploy her overwhelming security forces to break into homes, interrogate families, and round up tens of thousands, but her ruling party also unleashed its violent youth wing to help terrorize protesters. Hasina is perfectly fine with violence so long as it's perpetrated by her supporters.

Establishment-critical narrative

Hasina and her party have remained in power since 2009 not through violence but through elections. Due to this fact, the opposition BNP Party, often backed by Western powers, has taken advantage of genuine student protests and turned them into riots to destabilize the country and call for new elections. Hasina is no stranger to political upheaval — given her entire family was assassinated in 1975 — so hopefully she can fight through yet another era of inorganic chaos.


Establishment split

CRITICAL

PRO