Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has resigned following weeks of deadly anti-government protests, ending over two decades at the top of the country’s politics.
Ms Sheikh Hasina, 76, fled the country, reportedly landing in India on Monday. Jubilant crowds took to the streets to celebrate the news, with some storming the prime ministerial palace, reportedly looting and vandalising parts of her former residence.
Army chief Waker-Uz-Zaman said the military would begin talks on forming an interim government.
Hours after Ms Hasina’s resignation, President Mohammed Shahabuddin ordered the release of jailed former prime minister and opposition leader Khaleda Zia.
In a televised address on Monday afternoon, Waker-uz-Zaman said an interim government would be formed. He added that he would meet President Mohammed Shahabuddin and hoped that a “solution” would be found by the end of the day.
The army chief said he had already spoken to the country’s opposition political parties but did not make it clear who would head the new government. He urged Bangladeshis to trust the army, adding that “all killings and all injustice” would be “examined.”
Protesters were seen carrying out furniture from the prime minister’s residence.
In Dhaka, police and other government buildings were attacked and set on fire. Protesters attempted to tear down a statue of independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Ms Hasina’s father.
Army and police units were deployed across the city. Mobile phone service was reportedly cut off for several hours before being restored.
The AFP news agency reported that at least 66 people had died on Monday.
Ms Hasina’s departure leaves a vacuum in Bangladeshi politics, which has long been characterised by a rivalry between her Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
The country has experienced several military coups, most recently in 2007.
Debapriya Bhattacharya, a senior economist with the Centre for Policy Dialogue in Dhaka, told the BBC that while the resignation had been met with “euphoria” in the streets, attacks on the Hindu minority had escalated, posing an immediate challenge to the new authorities.
“There is a feeling that India completely backed Sheikh Hasina’s government. Protesters make no distinction between India and Hindu citizens of Bangladesh, which has already led to attacks on temples and people.
“Now there is a power vacuum, there is nobody to implement law and order. The new government will need to protect religious minorities.”
Ms Hasina’s allies said she would not return to the country’s politics. The former prime minister has spent a total of 20 years in office, first coming to power in 1996.
Her son, Sajeeb Wazed Joy, told the BBC’s Newshour programme: “She’s in her late 70s. She is so disappointed that, after all her hard work, a minority rises against her, I think she’s done.
“My family and I are done.”
Critics say Ms Hasina’s rule was characterised by forced disappearances, extrajudicial killings and the crushing of opposition figures and government critics.
But Mr Wazed, who also served as an adviser to the prime minister on technology, defended his mother’s record.
“She has turned Bangladesh around in the last 15 years.
“When she took over power, it was considered a failing state. It was a poor country.
“Until today, it was considered one of the rising tigers of Asia.”
About 300 people have been killed since protests broke out a month ago over a quota system for government jobs. The demonstrations, met with harsh repression by government forces, developed into a broader anti-government movement.
Dr Chietigj Bajpaee, a senior research fellow at the Chatham House think tank, said the country’s high unemployment rates had made the quotas, which reserve a third of civil service jobs for descendants of veterans of the country’s 1971 independence war with Pakistan, a particularly salient political issue.
“Public sector job quotas—with 400,000 new graduates competing for 3,000 civil service jobs – became a lightning rod for anti-government unrest,” Dr Bajpaee said.
He added that the speed of events reflected frustration among Bangladeshi youth over the country’s “one-party rule” over the last 15 years.
“In a country with such a vibrant civil society, efforts to curb political freedoms and free speech were bound to trigger a blowback.”
Most of the quota was scaled back by the government following a Supreme Court ruling last month, but students continued to protest, demanding justice for those killed and injured, and Ms Hasina’s resignation.
Mr Bhattacharya said protesters now expected the new government to go through with their demands, including democratic reforms, better jobs and improvements to the education system.