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Afghanistan/South Asia
Bangla: Hasina threatens more strikes at month-end
2004-03-08
Awami League (AL) President Sheikh Hasina yesterday rejected Prime Minister Khaleda Zia's call to give up hartal [street demonstrations] before a huge procession and said her party along with allies would enforce more hartals at the month-end against 'the misrule of the government'.
"It's our turn to misrule again!"
"After the end of the SSC examinations on March 24, we'll consider calling more hartals demanding resignation of the Khaleda regime," Hasina, also the leader of the opposition, told thousands of demonstrators from a truck in front of her Bangabandhu Avenue party headquarters before the beginning of the procession. She asked the Khaleda Zia administration to step down immediately, showing respect to people's desire. She alleged that people had no confidence in the present BNP-Jamaat coalition government as it totally failed to run Bangladesh.
So far, everybody seems to have failed to run Bangladesh...
The demonstrators of the AL and its front organisations paraded through different city roads for hours shouting anti-government slogans and carrying banners reading 'People Don't Want the Anti-people Government Any More', 'Step Down Immediately', and 'Khaleda's quit is Our One-point Demand', while many beat drums. The main opposition brought out the procession for the immediate resignation of the government and snap polls and unveiled protest day programmes from March 9 to March 22 across Bangladesh against what it said were repression, price hike and attack on prominent writer Humayun Azad along with the resignation.

The procession coincided with historic March 7, 1971 -- Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman set the tune for the Liberation War from a huge public rally at the now Suhrawardy Udyan. Justifying her calls for hartal, Hasina said: "Had the country been run properly, there had been no violence and corruption, no price hike of essentials and people had lived in peace and happiness, we would have not called the hartals." She said the ills along with 'siphoning off wealth abroad, violation of human rights, persecution of opposition political activists under the Khaleda regime' forced the AL and others to call hartals. On reneging on no-hartal commitment, the former prime minister said: "My non-hartal announcement was met with more violent hartals by the former opposition BNP. The BNP had enforced 382 hartals during the five-year AL rule."
Posted by:Fred

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