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Rokeya University gives financial aid to Abu Sayed's family

July 28, 2024 00:00:00


RANGPUR, July 26 (UNB): The administration of Begum Rokeya University, Rangpur (BRUR), has provided financial assistance to the family of Abu Sayed, a student of the university's English department, who lost life first during the students' countrywide quota reform protest.

Abu Sayed was known to have been one of the movement's organisers in Rangpur. In death, he was to become one of its icons.

A delegation from the university handed over a cheque of Tk7.5 lakh to his parents on Friday.

Proctor Shariful Islam said that under the directive of the Vice-Chancellor, the university administration has been in constant contact with Sayed's parents. He also stated that this assistance would continue.

Sayed's father said that Abu Sayed was the apple of his eye, and their family even relied on the money he made from private tutoring while completing his studies.

"Losing a child is an unbearable grief, and the hardest thing as a father was to carry my son's dead body on my shoulders. Now, I only ask everyone to pray for my son," he told newsmen.

He expressed that while they could not get their son back, having a job for a family member might help them manage better in their later years.

On July 16, Abu Sayed was killed in police firing during the quota reform movement. Not only was he the first reported death of a protester in police firing during the movement. A video of his apparent killing started doing the rounds on social media that very evening, and quickly went viral.

What it showed only served to fuel greater outrage among the protesters, and was arguably the clincher to forming a judicial commission into the six deaths that occurred that day.

The video showed a group of police converging on Sayed, who has seemingly broken away from the crowd and finds himself isolated on a side street in broad daylight, facing the police.

He is gesturing defiantly, with his arms spread wide, egging them on almost, to take their best shot - the timeless gesture of the weak towards the strong, of the rebel towards authority.

Yet the most important thing to note here is that clearly unarmed, and on his own, Abu Sayed poses absolutely no threat to anyone, let alone the team of police approaching him - still a good 50-60 feet away. It is also worth remembering that at this point, the situation around the country is nowhere near the state of chaos witnessed later in the week. To reiterate, this is the first death in the movement, about to occur. You cannot excuse it on the pretext of 'the heat of the battle'.


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