Hundreds of students protested across Bangladesh on Wednesday calling for political groups to be banned from campuses days after a student was killed, allegedly by activists from Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s ruling party.
The protests started in Dhaka after Sunday’s killing of 21-year-old Abrar Fahad at the dormitory of the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET), where he was a second-year student. He had written a Facebook post criticising a government water deal with India.
Responding to the protests, Hasina said the government would not interfere if any university decided to ban political groups. She said she had ordered her party’s student wing to expel anyone involved in the “extremely cruel” killing.
“I can feel the pain of the parents who lost their child,” Hasina told a news conference at her official residence.
Protests spread across the country on Wednesday, with many teachers joining students, who chanted slogans demanding justice.
Police said they had arrested 13 leaders of the Chhatra League — the student wing of Hasina’s Bangladesh Awami League — whose members have been accused of beating and killing Fahad by his fellow students and family.
“My son was innocent. He had his own opinions,” said Barkat Ullah, Fahad’s father. “They beat him for six hours and killed him.” Fahad’s body was found on a stairway at the university dormitory in the early hours of Monday. An autopsy showed that he had been bludgeoned with blunt objects and had extensive bruises on his hands, legs and back.
In an Oct.5 post on Facebook, Fahad had criticised a government move to share water with India, after Dhaka and New Delhi announced the signing of several deals, including allowing India to draw water from Bangladesh’s Feni river.
“Chhatra League did not give any instructions to beat any student,” said Lekhak Bhattacharya, the League’s acting general secretary. He demanded strong punishment to the killers, but said he did not support banning student political groups.
The United Nations on Wednesday condemned the killing and called in a statement for an independent investigation.
“Freedom of speech is a human right,” the UN said, adding “nobody should be harassed, tortured or killed for exercising it”.
The British High Commission in Bangladesh tweeted it was “shocked and saddened by events at BUET”.
The students are demanding that political groups be banned from campuses.
“We want a complete ban on party-based politics on the campus. We won’t tolerate it anymore after the killing of our fellow,” said Sanim Rahman, a student at BUET. “We’ll continue our protests until we get justice.” Mahmood Uddin Chowdhury, a Dhaka University teacher taking part in the protests, said everyone on campus was shocked.
“We are speechless. This is not acceptable for the students, for the parents, for the society,” he said.
Hasina, who has been ruling Bangladesh for nearly a decade, came to power for a third straight term following elections in December 2018 that opposition parties denounced as rigged in her favour. Her government has faced criticism for curbs on free speech and crackdown on dissent.
Bangladesh’s prime minister on Wednesday vowed to mete out the “highest punishment to the killers” of a university student who died after he criticised a deal the leader made with India.
“How inhumanly they have beaten him to death. I will never allow it. The criminals will surely face justice,” Hasina told reporters as she pledged to inflict the “highest punishment to the killers”.
Protesters have called for the attackers to be harshly punished and for the Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL), the student wing of Hasina’s party, to be banned.
“Today it is Fahad Abrar and tomorrow it could be any of us. These dorms have turned into a nightmare for students. We demand an end to torture,” Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology student Fahim Ahmed told AFP.
The prime minister stopped short of acceding to the protesters’ other demand that politics be banned on campuses, saying it was up to individual universities.
Agencies