Home Neighbours Bangladesh Bangladesh Student Leader Nahid Islam Quits Yunus-Led Govt

Bangladesh Student Leader Nahid Islam Quits Yunus-Led Govt

National Citizens Committee chief organiser Sarjis Alam earlier said a new political outfit will be announced by them on Friday.
Bangladesh student movement leader Nahid Islam resigns from interim government led by Muhammad Yunus. (Image credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Bangladesh student leader Nahid Islam, who spearheaded the movement that led to the ouster of the Sheikh Hasina-led Awami League government on August 5 last year, on Tuesday resigned from the interim Yunus government amid reports that he would join a new political party.

Official sources told UNB that Nahid Islam submitted his resignation letter to Chief Adviser Dr Muhammad Yunus.

National Citizens Committee chief organiser Sarjis Alam earlier said a new political outfit will be announced by them on Friday.

The new political outfit will be formed at the initiative of the Anti-Discrimination Student Movement and the National Citizens Committee.

Nahid is expected to lead the party as convener, sources told Somoy News.

The formation of the new political party hints that the student movement leaders want a resumption of electoral democracy in the South Asian country.

In the interim government led by Yunus, which came to power after Sheikh Hasina’s ouster, Nahid was appointed as an adviser for Posts, Telecommunications, and Information Technology.


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Yunus, an unelected leader, has faced criticisms for the rise in violence against Hindus and other minorities since his government took control of the country following Hasina’s ouster.

He is also blamed by critics for patronising Islamists.

Rise To Prominence

Nahid Islam, often described by the media as a soft-spoken sociology student, led the student’s protest in Bangladesh last year which ended Hasina’s straight 15-year rule in the country that was liberated from Pakistan in 1971 with India’s support.

Islam rose to prominence in July last year after police detained him and several other Dhaka University students over the protest against job quota that turned violent.

Nearly 300 people, including a large number of students, died during the deadly protests that ended only after Hasina fled to India on August 5.

Born in 1998, Islam is the son of a teacher.

(With inputs from IBNS)