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Bangladeshi youth bore the brunt of last week’s violent protests. They want accountability.

On their face, the protests that have wracked Bangladesh in recent weeks are about jobs. 

The country is on track to graduate from the United Nation’s Least Developed Countries list in 2026, but not everyone has benefited from this economic growth. Young people face a 12.5% unemployment rate, three times the overall rate.

Why We Wrote This

Bangladeshis are reeling from one of the most violent weeks in their country’s recent history. At the center of the chaos are young people striving to be heard.

Against this backdrop, Prapti Taposhi and other students took to the streets in early July to protest government job quotas for veterans of the 1971 Liberation War and their descendants. 

But as the demonstrations grew, so did violence against protesters. There have been nearly 200 deaths reported since July 16, and when the government responded to the chaos by shutting off the internet, deploying soldiers, and imposing a nationwide curfew, an outraged Ms. Taposhi led young women through the streets by burning torch.

This week, the Supreme Court ruled to roll back quotas and the internet has been partially restored, but protesters are now demanding the government face consequences for the deadly unrest.

“The peaceful, student-centric, and apolitical protest has evolved into a mass movement against autocracy,” says Ms. Taposhi.

Bangladesh’s relatively short history has been dominated by fights for independence, democracy, and economic advancement. And now Prapti Taposhi, an economics student at Jahangirnagar University, is one face of its newest struggle: for fairness.

She was among the first students to take to the streets this July in Dhaka, the Bangladeshi capital, to protest government job quotas for veterans of the country’s 1971 war for independence and their descendants.

But as the demonstrations grew, so did violence against protesters – and Ms. Taposhi’s own sense of injustice.

Why We Wrote This

Bangladeshis are reeling from one of the most violent weeks in their country’s recent history. At the center of the chaos are young people striving to be heard.

There have been nearly 200 deaths reported since July 16 – including three of Ms. Taposhi’s close friends – marking one of the most violent weeks in the country’s history. When the government responded to the chaos by shutting off the internet, deploying soldiers, and imposing a nationwide curfew, an outraged Ms. Taposhi led other young women through the streets by burning torch.

Pulok Kumar

Prapti Taposhi carries a torch during a protest in Bangladesh in 2020. The economics student was among the first students to take to the streets in July 2024, calling for job quota reform.

“The protests against inequality are increasing day by day,” she says, her words laced with both fear and anger, and her wrist bandaged from an injury sustained during a demonstration. “The peaceful, student-centric, and apolitical protest has evolved into a mass movement against autocracy.”

Against the backdrop of a dearth of economic opportunities for young people, these protests are, in some ways, a generational pushback against the sacrosanctity of Bangladesh’s founding national narrative. But the movement has come to transcend generations, and grown well beyond a policy question.

Saad Hammadi, policy and advocacy manager at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo, Ontario, says it is now fueled by anger at inflation and cost of living, corruption, clampdowns on freedom of expression, and other autocratic tendencies of the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

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