• Monday, September 16, 2024
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Bangladesh protesters want Nobel Peace Prize winner Yunus as interim government leader, reject military rule

Bangladesh protesters want Nobel Peace Prize winner Yunus as interim government leader, reject military rule

The organisers of the Bangladeshi students protest have said they want Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus to head an interim government after longtime Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina resigned and fled the country.

Nahid Islam, a 26-year-old sociology student who spearheaded the protest movement against quotas in government jobs that morphed into a national uprising against the administration, said in a video post on social media that Yunus had consented to take over, Al Jazeera reported.

“We want to see the process rolling by the morning,” Islam said late on Monday. “We urge the president to take steps as soon as possible to form an interim government headed by Dr Yunus.”

The protest organisers were scheduled to meet army officials on Tuesday, the army said in a statement.

Islam said the students would not accept an army-led government.

“We have given our blood, been martyred, and we have to fulfil our pledge to build a new Bangladesh,” he said.

“No government other than the one proposed by the students will be accepted. As we have said, no military government, or one backed by the military, or a government of fascists, will be accepted.”

Yunus, 84, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 after he pioneered microlending. Known as the “banker to the poor”, he faced corruption accusations in Bangladesh and was pSut on trial during Hasina’s rule, but maintained the charges against him were politically motivated.

According to Al Jazeera, a spokesperson for Yunus said he had accepted the students’ request to be an adviser to the interim government, the Reuters news agency reported. The Nobel laureate would return to Bangladesh “immediately” after a minor medical procedure in Paris, the spokesperson was quoted as saying.

On Monday, army chief General Waker-Uz-Zaman said he was temporarily taking control of the country as soldiers tried to stem the growing unrest.

He said he had held talks with leaders of major political parties – excluding Hasina’s long-ruling Awami League – and announced that an interim government would run Bangladesh.

He also promised to investigate the deaths of at least 135 people across Bangladesh since mid-July in some of the country’s worst bloodshed since the 1971 war of independence. “Keep faith in the military. We will investigate all the killings and punish the responsible,” he said.