Thousands of Bangladeshi students protest against tax on university fees
Students are angry over a 7.5% value added tax slapped recently on fees for private universities
DHAKA:
Thousands of students staged street protests in the Bangladeshi capital for a second straight day Thursday against a tax on university fees which they say discriminates against private higher education.
The students barricaded key roads across Dhaka as part of the rally, bringing traffic to a halt in the city of 15 million people, as police looked on.
Tensions were high after police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at protesting students on Wednesday from the city's East West University after they blocked a key road.
At least 35 people were injured in the clashes between protesters and police, mass-circulated English newspaper The Daily Star said.
"We were holding the protest peacefully when police fired rubber bullets all of a sudden," Mashfiq Ahsan, a protest organiser, told AFP.
"Education is not a product but one of our fundamental rights. This added tax is absolutely absurd," he said.
Read: Protests in Bangladesh over latest child killing
Students are angry over a 7.5% value added tax slapped recently on fees for private universities where thousands of Bangladeshi students are enrolled, but not those for public institutions.
Police said several thousand took part in Thursday's protest, but organisers said tens of thousands of students from private universities staged the demonstrations.
Government worker Abdullah-al Kafi said he supported the protest despite being forced to walk nearly seven kilometres (4.3 miles) to his office because of the traffic disruptions.
"I spend my hard-earned money to send my two daughters to a private university. I don't mind walking to office to support their cause," he told AFP.
Thousands of students staged street protests in the Bangladeshi capital for a second straight day Thursday against a tax on university fees which they say discriminates against private higher education.
The students barricaded key roads across Dhaka as part of the rally, bringing traffic to a halt in the city of 15 million people, as police looked on.
Tensions were high after police fired rubber bullets and tear gas at protesting students on Wednesday from the city's East West University after they blocked a key road.
At least 35 people were injured in the clashes between protesters and police, mass-circulated English newspaper The Daily Star said.
"We were holding the protest peacefully when police fired rubber bullets all of a sudden," Mashfiq Ahsan, a protest organiser, told AFP.
"Education is not a product but one of our fundamental rights. This added tax is absolutely absurd," he said.
Read: Protests in Bangladesh over latest child killing
Students are angry over a 7.5% value added tax slapped recently on fees for private universities where thousands of Bangladeshi students are enrolled, but not those for public institutions.
Police said several thousand took part in Thursday's protest, but organisers said tens of thousands of students from private universities staged the demonstrations.
Government worker Abdullah-al Kafi said he supported the protest despite being forced to walk nearly seven kilometres (4.3 miles) to his office because of the traffic disruptions.
"I spend my hard-earned money to send my two daughters to a private university. I don't mind walking to office to support their cause," he told AFP.