After 15 years in power, Bangladesh PM flees country amid deadly nationwide protest

(FILES) Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina speaks at Japan's national press club in Tokyo on May 28, 2014. - Cheering protesters stormed Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's palace on August 5, 2024, after she fled, the culmination of more than a month of deadly anti-government protests. (Photo by YOSHIKAZU TSUNO / AFP)


Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has fled the country following weeks of cataclysmic social upheaval and civil disobedience.

Citizens of south Asian nation have been protesting for weeks now demanding the resignation of Hasina who have been in power for 15 years.

Hasina, who has ruled since 2009, had ignored weeks of demands for her to step aside but fled on Monday following a brutal day of unrest on Sunday in which nearly 100 people died.

Hasina, 76, fled the country by helicopter, a source close to the leader told AFP shortly after protesters had stormed her palace in Dhaka.

“Her security team asked her leave, she did not find any time to prepare”, the source said.

The source adding she left first by motorcade but then was flown out, without saying her destination. “She was later evacuated on a helicopter.”

Jubilant looking crowds had waved flags, some dancing on top of a tank in the streets on Monday morning before hundreds broke through the gates of Hasina’s official residence.

Bangladesh’s Channel 24 broadcast images of crowds running into the compound, waving to the camera as they celebrated.

Others smashed a statues of Hasina’s father Sheikh Mujibur Rahma, the country’s independence hero.

Bangladesh’s army chief Waker-Uz-Zaman would address the nation on Monday afternoon, a military spokesman told AFP without giving further details.

Security forces had supported Hasina’s government throughout the unrest, which began last month against civil service job quotas then escalated into wider calls for her to stand down.

But the protesters defied curfews and deadly force.

At least 94 people were killed on Sunday, including 14 police officers, in the deadliest day of the unrest.

Protesters and pro-government forces countrywide battled each other with sticks and knives, and security forces opened fire.

The day’s violence took the total number of people killed since protests began in early July to at least 300, according to an AFP tally based on police, government officials and doctors at hospitals.

Waker told officers on Saturday that the military “always stood by the people”, according to an official statement.

The military declared an emergency in January 2007 after widespread political unrest and installed a military-backed caretaker government for two years.

Hasina has ruled Bangladesh since 2009 and won her fourth consecutive election in January after a vote without real opposition.

Her government is accused by rights groups of misusing state institutions to entrench its hold on power and stamp out dissent, including through the extrajudicial killing of opposition activists.

Demonstrations began over the reintroduction of a quota scheme that reserved more than half of all government jobs for certain groups.

The protests escalated despite the scheme having been scaled back by Bangladesh’s top court.

Soldiers and police with armoured vehicles in Dhaka had barricaded routes to Hasina’s office with barbed wire on Monday morning, but vast crowds flooded the streets, tearing down barriers.

The Business Standard newspaper estimated as many as 400,000 protesters were on the streets but it was impossible to verify the figure.

“The time has come for the final protest,” said Asif Mahmud, one of the key leaders in the nationwide civil disobedience campaign.

In several cases, soldiers and police did not intervene to stem Sunday’s protests, unlike during the past month of rallies that repeatedly ended in deadly crackdowns.

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