Dubai Telegraph - Back to class after Bangladesh's student-led revolution

EUR -
AED 3.874023
AFN 72.130016
ALL 98.11409
AMD 410.662866
ANG 1.902473
AOA 962.978898
ARS 1057.647067
AUD 1.619391
AWG 1.898535
AZN 1.792211
BAM 1.956099
BBD 2.131406
BDT 126.149311
BGN 1.956688
BHD 0.397552
BIF 3117.847733
BMD 1.054741
BND 1.417704
BOB 7.310119
BRL 6.089343
BSD 1.055652
BTN 89.055633
BWP 14.421071
BYN 3.454596
BYR 20672.932703
BZD 2.127806
CAD 1.473437
CDF 3021.834492
CHF 0.931438
CLF 0.037224
CLP 1027.128228
CNY 7.638124
CNH 7.645594
COP 4637.265775
CRC 536.074441
CUC 1.054741
CUP 27.950649
CVE 110.281882
CZK 25.294283
DJF 187.976994
DKK 7.459026
DOP 63.668841
DZD 140.733832
EGP 52.432045
ERN 15.821122
ETB 131.612976
FJD 2.393945
FKP 0.832525
GBP 0.833804
GEL 2.889986
GGP 0.832525
GHS 16.757565
GIP 0.832525
GMD 74.886692
GNF 9099.26355
GTQ 8.149248
GYD 220.853809
HKD 8.208946
HNL 26.675704
HRK 7.523744
HTG 138.669913
HUF 409.861762
IDR 16811.418728
ILS 3.94631
IMP 0.832525
INR 89.059574
IQD 1382.811687
IRR 44396.702148
ISK 145.501474
JEP 0.832525
JMD 167.324028
JOD 0.747912
JPY 163.647368
KES 136.700927
KGS 91.234877
KHR 4259.611695
KMF 493.090828
KPW 949.266918
KRW 1475.140715
KWD 0.324396
KYD 0.879735
KZT 524.390276
LAK 23179.548427
LBP 94540.176289
LKR 307.127016
LRD 191.067438
LSL 19.146631
LTL 3.114377
LVL 0.638002
LYD 5.15074
MAD 10.545614
MDL 19.211941
MGA 4941.709646
MKD 61.49535
MMK 3425.759133
MNT 3584.011439
MOP 8.463396
MRU 41.963827
MUR 49.06673
MVR 16.305777
MWK 1830.462861
MXN 21.408905
MYR 4.71311
MZN 67.450687
NAD 19.146631
NGN 1772.588174
NIO 38.845578
NOK 11.659123
NPR 142.486786
NZD 1.796451
OMR 0.405991
PAB 1.055562
PEN 4.006013
PGK 4.24959
PHP 62.184917
PKR 293.457241
PLN 4.33544
PYG 8267.187196
QAR 3.849489
RON 4.976379
RSD 117.014088
RUB 106.001032
RWF 1455.709045
SAR 3.959779
SBD 8.812925
SCR 14.365572
SDG 634.425628
SEK 11.619333
SGD 1.41666
SHP 0.832525
SLE 23.810825
SLL 22117.406134
SOS 603.286634
SRD 37.369443
STD 21831.018799
SVC 9.236414
SYP 2650.069422
SZL 19.135748
THB 36.602169
TJS 11.242221
TMT 3.691595
TND 3.33201
TOP 2.470308
TRY 36.38423
TTD 7.147094
TWD 34.36872
TZS 2797.553032
UAH 43.528351
UGX 3895.596355
USD 1.054741
UYU 45.126908
UZS 13558.07553
VES 48.584921
VND 26811.528026
VUV 125.221026
WST 2.944407
XAF 656.051211
XAG 0.033864
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.850491
XDR 0.803215
XOF 656.051211
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.606233
ZAR 19.132209
ZMK 9493.941296
ZMW 29.214195
ZWL 339.626321
  • RBGPF

    59.6900

    59.69

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    24.52

    -0.18%

  • CMSD

    -0.0836

    24.26

    -0.34%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    137.41

    -0.56%

  • GSK

    -0.1100

    33.35

    -0.33%

  • BTI

    0.1500

    37.08

    +0.4%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    45.11

    -0.4%

  • SCS

    -0.0200

    13.07

    -0.15%

  • BCE

    -0.3100

    27

    -1.15%

  • RIO

    -0.0400

    62.39

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    -0.3100

    63.27

    -0.49%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    6.61

    -1.21%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.23

    -0.23%

  • AZN

    -0.6000

    63.2

    -0.95%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    29.08

    -0.03%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    8.94

    +0.22%

Back to class after Bangladesh's student-led revolution
Back to class after Bangladesh's student-led revolution / Photo: LUIS TATO - AFP

Back to class after Bangladesh's student-led revolution

After weeks of deadly student-led protests in Bangladesh toppled the autocratic premier, among the first things children at a school in the capital Dhaka did when they returned to class was honour their slain friend.

Text size:

Shafiq Uddin Ahmed Ahnaf, 17, was on the frontlines of the demonstrations this month when he was shot and killed.

While much remains politically uncertain in Bangladesh, two weeks after then-prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled to India, the reopening of schools on Sunday was a sign of daily life returning to normal.

Many of the 450 people who were killed -- most by police fire -- in the weeks of protests leading up to Hasina's August 5 ouster were students like Ahnaf.

And on Sunday, the first day back in class since the unrest, the slain boy's classmates honoured him by placing a bouquet on the desk he once occupied, Dhaka media reported.

Mazeda Begum, principal at another public school in Dhaka, said students were keen to return to the classroom "after going through the month-long trauma".

Begum is planning a cultural programme "so that they can get back their mental strength".

- 'Brave' -

Her colleague, English teacher Riah Hyder, cancelled her holiday to be there for the resumption of classes.

"This is the most important thing for us -- that students have come back to school," she said.

Many students said they had been inspired by the "courage" of the protesters.

"I'm proud of them because they were brave enough to protest against the malpractice," said 16-year-old schoolgirl Mahiba Hossain Rahee.

Rahee, her hair in neat pigtails and dressed in a blue uniform, said she had spent "sleepless nights thinking about the people of my country" during the protests.

"Those days were really bad," she told AFP, adding she hoped her country would change for the better.

"We don't want any more blood to shed," she said. "We want a happy nation."

- 'Newborn' nation -

Tenth-grade schoolgirl Naifa Tahin spent weeks holed up in her house in the capital Dhaka, but said returning to class felt like a homecoming.

The 16-year-old said she was excited to be back learning, seeing her friends -- and expressed hope for a better future for their country.

"For the past few weeks, we were not able to come back to school and attend classes and not see my classmates. In my mind there was a kind of restlessness working," she said.

"So being finally back... feels very nice," Tahin added. "It feels like I'm back at home."

Bangladesh's interim leader, 84-year-old Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, returned from Europe to take up the monumental task of steering democratic reforms in the country riven by institutional decay.

"Right now, all we can do is stay patient," Tahin said.

"Our country is under construction because it's kind of a newborn baby."

A.El-Ahbaby--DT