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Student protesters won’t stand down despite the top court reducing quotas for government jobs. After weeks of widespread unrest in Bangladesh, the Supreme Court has changed a controversial quota system for government jobs. It has significantly reduced the share of public sector positions reserved for war veterans’ family members. But despite the ruling, the protests appear to be far from over. Initially student led, they have grown to include people frustrated by rising inflation and high food prices. Dozens of student leaders, activists and opposition figures have been arrested. With soldiers on the streets, a nationwide curfew in place and a communications blackout, there are also growing calls for Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to take accountability. So will the quota reforms be enough to restore calm? Presenter: Mohammed Jamjoom Guests: Mubashar Hasan – Political analyst and post-doctoral fellow at the University of Oslo Zaman Ashraf – Bangladeshi activist who works with the Asian Human Rights Commission Sreeradha Datta – Professor at the Jindal School of International Affairs whose research focuses on India-Bangladesh relations Published on Sunday 21 July 2024.

Beyond the headlines to the heart of the news of the day. Al Jazeera gets the Inside Story from some of the best minds in the Middle East and beyond. Al Jazeera journalists and guests dissect and discuss the day’s top story.

Primary Title
  • Inside Story
Episode Title
  • What’s behind the recurring unrest in Bangladesh?
Date Broadcast
  • Monday 22 July 2024
Start Time
  • 05 : 30
Finish Time
  • 05 : 54
Duration
  • 24:00
Channel
  • Al Jazeera English
Broadcaster
  • Al Jazeera Media Network
Programme Description
  • Beyond the headlines to the heart of the news of the day. Al Jazeera gets the Inside Story from some of the best minds in the Middle East and beyond. Al Jazeera journalists and guests dissect and discuss the day’s top story.
Episode Description
  • Student protesters won’t stand down despite the top court reducing quotas for government jobs. After weeks of widespread unrest in Bangladesh, the Supreme Court has changed a controversial quota system for government jobs. It has significantly reduced the share of public sector positions reserved for war veterans’ family members. But despite the ruling, the protests appear to be far from over. Initially student led, they have grown to include people frustrated by rising inflation and high food prices. Dozens of student leaders, activists and opposition figures have been arrested. With soldiers on the streets, a nationwide curfew in place and a communications blackout, there are also growing calls for Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to take accountability. So will the quota reforms be enough to restore calm? Presenter: Mohammed Jamjoom Guests: Mubashar Hasan – Political analyst and post-doctoral fellow at the University of Oslo Zaman Ashraf – Bangladeshi activist who works with the Asian Human Rights Commission Sreeradha Datta – Professor at the Jindal School of International Affairs whose research focuses on India-Bangladesh relations Published on Sunday 21 July 2024.
Classification
  • G
Owning Collection
  • Chapman Archive
Broadcast Platform
  • Television
Languages
  • English
Captions
Live Broadcast
  • No
Rights Statement
  • Made for the University of Auckland's educational use as permitted by the Screenrights Licensing Agreement.
Notes
  • Portions to this edition of Al Jazeera English's "Inside Story", "What’s behind the recurring unrest in Bangladesh?" for Monday 22 July 2024 are absent from the source recording.
Genres
  • Commentary
  • News
  • Panel
Hosts
  • Mohammed Jamjoom (Presenter)