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In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

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In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

The capital, along with the entire nation, resonated with slogans – and then with violence – in the heady hours after the prime minister’s ouster.

In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People chanting victorious slogans at the premises of the National Parliament House on the afternoon of August 5, 2024.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

The crowd at the National Parliament House premises.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

The crowd at the National Parliament House premises.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People looted almost everything from the Ganabhaban, the prime minister’s official residence. However, after the evening, many returned the stolen items voluntarily to the military, stating they acted out of overexcitement.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People looted almost everything from the Ganabhaban. However, after the evening, many returned the stolen items voluntarily to the military, stating they acted out of overexcitement.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People expressed their gratitude to the Bangladesh Army soldiers.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Along with joy, vandalism and arson also took place around the country.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

A man is in a relaxed mood on the rooftop of an MP hostel, waving his hand.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Almost all of the streets of Dhaka were filled with people after the announcement.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Bangladeshis took care to document the historic moment.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Bangladeshis took care to document the historic moment.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People on top of the Airplane Sculpture at Bijay Sharami.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People entered the National Parliament House, but shortly after, students stood up and requested that all entry points be blocked, which proved effective.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People on top of the Airplane Sculpture at Bijay Sharami.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

People began gossiping with full enthusiasm while waiting for the official announcement.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Some young men are sailing a boat and waving the national flag on the lake at the National Parliament House premises.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Flag were held up in celebration across the country.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve
In Photos: Bangladesh After Hasina Fled

Chalk writing on the streets proclaims “36 July” – i.e. August 5 – to be “Victory Day Bangladesh.

Credit: Saqlain Rizve

A news ticker scrolled across Bangladesh’s TV channels at around 11 a.m. on August 5, amid a complete internet blackout, announcing that Bangladesh Army Chief Waker-uz-Zaman would address the nation at 2 pm. A palpable sense of anticipation gripped the people. The return of internet connectivity at 1:30 p.m. only heightened the certainty of a seismic shift in power. 

Sheikh Hasina, the once unassailable leader, criticized for her autocratic governance, seemed on the brink of downfall. Media outlets reported thousands of people from all classes converging on Ganabhaban, the prime minister’s residence, their chants of dissent echoing with a mixture of jubilation and scorn.

The capital, along with the entire nation, resonated with slogans as the air became charged with a sense of freedom. The student-led quota protest movement, which had swelled into a mass uprising following the tragic loss of over 300 lives, appeared to have achieved its aim of national salvation.

By approximately 1:45 p.m., Sheikh Hasina, accompanied by her sister Sheikh Rehena, departed from the Tejgaon military airport via a Bangladesh Army helicopter. She sought refuge in India, initially landing in Agartala before relocating to a secure residence in Uttar Pradesh, leaving behind a party in disarray from grassroots to metropolitan echelons.

As the masses began to infiltrate Ganabhaban and the National Parliament House around 3 pm., the military personnel commenced a strategic withdrawal in the face of an overwhelming tide of protesters.

Simultaneously, a wave of violence swept across the country, targeting leaders of Hasina’s Awami League party. Reports emerged of Bangladesh National Party and Jamaat-e-Islami affiliates perpetrating fatal attacks and ransacking the homes of AL members. This surge of unrest cast a shadow over the students who had stood against the recently toppled regime, as the destruction reached historical monuments, including the desecration of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s sculpture, a symbol of the nation’s heritage.

These images provide glimpses of Dhaka amid the mix of chaos, unrest, and jubilation following Hasina’s departure.

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