A court in the United Arab Emirates has jailed 57 foreign nationals – all of them from Bangladesh – for staging protests in the UAE against their own government.
Three Bangladeshis were sentenced to life, 53 others to 10 years in prison and one to 11 years for “gathering and inciting riots” during protests on Friday, the official Emirati news agency WAM said on Monday, adding they would be deported after the completion of their prison terms.
The defendants organised large-scale marches in several streets of the UAE “in protest against decisions made by the Bangladeshi government,” it added.
Unauthorised protests are prohibited in the UAE. The country’s penal code also criminalises offending foreign states or jeopardising ties with them.
Protests led by students began earlier this month in Bangladesh after a court in the capital, Dhaka, last month reinstated a government quota system that reserved more than 50 percent of the civil services jobs. Students have been demanding that job quotas, which include 30 percent reserved for descendants of freedom fighters who participated in the 1971 war of independence, be abolished amid stagnant job growth and high rates of youth unemployment.
The government crackdown on the protests and attacks on sit-ins by groups linked to the governing party triggered nationwide unrest, posing the biggest challenge to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who was sworn in for her fourth term in January.
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