Over 200 British university academics, workers and student groups have declared their solidarity with the student movement in Bangladesh that has emerged in light of quota reform protests.
They are also calling for an end to the Bangladeshi government’s repression of students, as well as to the British government’s training of Bangladeshi police forces like the notorious Rapid Action Battalion unit (RAB).
The statement, coordinated by the UK Bangladeshi organisation Nijjor Manush, is published amidst growing repression of faculty in Bangladesh engaging with student protestors
Highlighting the progressive role of student movements historically, the statement stresses the links between recent student mass mobilisation in both Bangladesh and in Britain, such as the student encampment movement in solidarity with Palestinians, as well as the draconian response from the government and universities in both instances.
The signatories call for academics and university workers in Bangladesh to lend their solidarity to their students, and affirms their support the the deepening of democratic struggle in Bangladesh.
“Bangladeshis in the diaspora have been outraged by the brutal response of the Bangladeshi government to the current student movement.
It has exposed the thinly-veiled contempt of the Bangladeshi government towards its people and their democratic aspirations. On this, the Bangladeshi government can find common ground with our own government here in Britain – given the British state’s training and support for the notorious Rapid Action Battalion police unit, and recent joint agreement between the two governments to expedite the deportation of Bangladeshi asylum seekers from Britain.
We call for an end to the British government’s complicity with state violence in Bangladesh, and express our support for the deepening of popular democratic struggle in Bangladesh by students, workers, peasants and the oppressed as the antidote to the oppressive rule of the Awami League government”.
“As Bangladeshi academics in Britain, we extend our full solidarity and support to students currently on the frontline in Bangladesh, and call on our counterparts in Bangladeshi universities to support their students.
The re-emergence of the quota reform movement – and the draconian response to it – has seen the arrested ambitions of students and youth in Bangladesh, facing large scale unemployment and inequitable access to public sector employment, reveal the widespread discontent with the ruling dispensation in Bangladesh. The government needs to publicly acknowledge, apologize, and provide justice for the martyrs of the movement in order for the nation to move forward. The collective memory of the draconian acts, without proper justice and political reformation, will only lead to repeated cycles of the horror that has transpired.
The task of transforming society cannot be shouldered by students alone. It is one that can only be carried through by the students of Bangladesh alongside the peasants, the workers and the oppressed.”
As university workers in the UK we stand in full solidarity with the current Bangladeshi student movement, and against the brutal repression by the Bangladeshi state against reform protestors.
Through history, student movements can and have taken on a life of their own and strike at heart of deeper social and political malaises in their society.
We recognise that students’ demands for reform of the civil service reservation quota for descendants of veterans speak to the wider issues of rampant cronyism and corruption of the Bangladeshi government, as well as high rates of unemployment and inactivity, and diminishing possibilities for youth in Bangladesh.
The savage repression of the movement, through police forces, the notorious Rapid Action Battalion and the ruling party’s student wing, starkly underscores the suffocation of political life under the government of Sheikh Hasina.
We support the democratic aspirations of students and workers in Bangladesh, and encourage academics and university workers in Bangladesh to lend their solidarity to their students also.
We also recognise how the repression of students and youth in Bangladesh mirrors the escalating repression against the rising tide of student movements in British universities, including most recently student encampments in solidarity with Palestine across dozens of universities.
And we acknowledge the interconnection between state violence in Bangladesh and Britain – especially with the training provided to the Rapid Action Battalion by Britain, which have become notorious for extrajudicial killings, and are currently engaged in the repression of Bangladeshi youth.
Therefore we stand as Bangladeshis and non-Bangladeshis, as those working within universities, in solidarity with the Bangladeshi student movement: for their demands for a more just reform of the quota system, for the deepening of democratic struggle in Bangladesh, and for an end to British complicity in the Bangladeshi state’s violent repression.