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Return to classrooms, campuses

Chief Adviser urges students


September 06, 2024 00:00:00


Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus on Thursday called upon the students to return to their classrooms and campuses as a well-educated and competent generation is required to reap the benefits of the revolution.

"Now it's time to go back to study. Schools, colleges and universities have been opened. I urge you to return to the classrooms and campuses. Because, we need a well-educated and skilled generation to take home the benefits of the revolution," he said, reports UNB.

The Chief Adviser made the call in a statement delivered on the occasion of one month of the fall of prime minister Sheikh Hasina's regime in the face of a student-led mass uprising.

"Today (Thursday) we are celebrating the first month of Bangladesh's second independence. Hundreds of students and people from all walks of life made the supreme sacrifice for one of the most glorious revolutions in history," he said.

Pointing at the students, he said during the revolution, they had to leave study and pass sleepless nights worrying about their friends, and take to streets in daytime to resist the brutal regime, telling each other goodbye forever.

Prof Yunus said the students guarded the religious minority communities and their places of worship as well as took the responsibility of managing traffic across the country after the revolution ended. "I know your study witnessed a huge disruption," he added.

Noting that Sheikh Hasina fled the country leaving behind a corrupt state and a fragile economy, he said, "We've taken the responsibility to establish our Bangladesh in its full glory."

The Chief Adviser said he is committed to fulfilling the dream that young revolutionaries have awakened in the minds of the people of the country to build a new Bangladesh. "Being inspired by the sacrifices of the martyrs, we want to change the course of history. I want to introduce a new era," he said.

Noting that only one month elapsed after the interim government took the charges, he said the government started important reforms to achieve the actual goal of the revolution.

"Our first task is to ensure justice and accountability for the killings occurred in July and August," he said adding that they invited the UN Human Rights Office to conduct an independent and impartial inquiry into the genocide and the UNHR also sent it team to Bangladesh and started work in this regard.

Besides, he talked to top international legal experts to form an international standard tribunal to try the people who committed crimes against humanity in July and August, said Prof Yunus.

"We want the extradition of the killers and the repatriation of the money embezzled by corrupt individuals, politicians and bureaucrats during the regime of the dictator. This is why I've started talking with expert firms," he said.

He said one of their main responsibilities is to ensure free treatment for thousands of people who sustained seriously injured during the revolution.

"We're continuously working to prepare a complete list of martyrs and injured. The main list has already been prepared," he said.


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