The quota controversy, however, is only the proverbial last straw on the camel’s back. Tension had been building up for some time for many reasons: Hasina’s autocratic rule over the past decade, her mindset that she and her party were sole ‘owners’ of the legacy of the 1971 freedom struggle, and, most importantly, large-scale corruption involving those within and close to the ruling party, conjoined with post-Covid economic hard days. Rising energy costs following the Ukraine war, weak employment prospects and spike in the cost of living has only exacerbated this tough economic situation where seeking jobs, especially government jobs, has become a mad scramble.
As in any protest movement, the government sees the protest as a showdown that is ‘anti-national’ in nature. The real issue remains Hasina’s inability to restart the economy and unwillingness to control corruption within her party and government.