Bangladesh capital hit by mass protests demanding safe roads

Bangladesh capital hit by mass protests demanding safe roads
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Bangladeshi students block a road during a student protest in Dhaka on August 2, 2018, following the deaths of two college students in a road accident on July 30. (AFP)
Bangladesh capital hit by mass protests demanding safe roads
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Bangladeshi students block a road during a student protest in Dhaka on August 2, 2018, following the deaths of two college students in a road accident on July 30. (AFP)
Bangladesh capital hit by mass protests demanding safe roads
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Bangladeshi students march on a street during a student protest in Dhaka on August 2, 2018, following the deaths of two college students in a road accident on July 30. (AFP)
Updated 03 August 2018
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Bangladesh capital hit by mass protests demanding safe roads

Bangladesh capital hit by mass protests demanding safe roads
  • Dhaka remained largely cut off from the rest of Bangladesh on Friday, with local and long-distance buses staying off the roads after five days of protests by young people demanding safer streets.
  • The protests, which began Sunday after two college students were struck and killed by a pair of buses, eventually paralyzed the capital of 7 million.

DHAKA: Dhaka remained largely cut off from the rest of Bangladesh on Friday, with local and long-distance buses staying off the roads after five days of protests by young people demanding safer streets.
The protests, which began Sunday after two college students were struck and killed by a pair of buses, eventually paralyzed the capital of 7 million, with tens of thousands of demonstrators blocking roads.
Students also stopped thousands of private vehicles — including those of top officials and judges — demanding to see if the cars were registered and the drivers licensed. One minister had to abandon his vehicle in the street after protesters found that his paperwork was not in order, according to news reports.
There was no sign of mass protests Friday, the beginning of the country’s weekend, but dozens of people formed a human chain in front of the main press club in Dhaka to call for transportation reform.
“We must bring changes,” said Selina Akter, a mother of two schoolchildren who joined the group.
Corruption is rife in Bangladesh, making it easy for unlicensed drivers and unregistered vehicles to ply the roads. At least 12,000 people die each year in road accidents often blamed on faulty vehicles, reckless driving and lax traffic enforcement.
The two buses involved in the Sunday accident were racing to collect passengers, a common occurrence in the city, which is regularly gridlocked by traffic chaos. One of the bus drivers had fled the scene, though both were later arrested.
Abdur Rahim, a top leader of the Bangladesh Road Transport Workers’ Federation, said that bus operators would stay off the streets until security improves. A handful of buses were attacked during the protests.
“We have invested lot of money to do business, we can’t let people burn our vehicles in the name of protests,” he said. “We need our security too.”
Buses are key to transportation in Bangladesh, where trains are overcrowded and most people cannot afford their own cars.