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Today’s ‘Student Rights Council’ got acquainted with the quota reform movement on April 6, 2016. The ‘Bangladesh General Council for the Protection of Student Rights’, led by APM Suhel, a student from the Jagannath University, made its debut on Thursday (October 15). This new council name is the former name of the student rights council. Although the name and purpose are the same, a council cannot accept another council. Instead, the two councils blame each other.
The Student Rights Council is led by Dhaka University students Hasan Al Mamun, Nurul Haque Nur, Muhammad Rashed Khan and Faruk Hasan. They were also on the council’s convening committee. The four-member organization became widely known throughout the country through the quota reform movement.
Some of them, including Nurul Haque Nur, came under attack towards the end of the quota reform movement. They came to the discussion. Nurul Haque was elected as the vice chairman of the panel of the “General Council for the Protection of the Rights of Bangladesh Students” in the Daksu elections.
Nur was attacked in Daksu’s office on December 22 last year. APM Suhel, a student at Jagannath University, joint coordinator of the Student Rights Council, was also injured. However, Suhel was expelled from the organization in May this year on charges of being involved in activities against the organization.
On September 20, a student from Dhaka University filed a rape case against six individuals, including Hasan Al Mamun of the Student Rights Council. Nurul Haque was also charged in the case as an accessory to rape. Jagannath University student APM Suhel also spoke about this. And since then, the issue of the Suhel-Nur disagreement has come to the fore. In its continuation, the “Bangladesh Student Rights Protection General Council” was launched under Suhel’s leadership.
However, there is still unity among the four leaders of the Student Rights Council, said the interim convenor of the organization. They are not giving importance to the new organization under the old name under Suhel’s leadership.
Muhammad Rashed Khan, interim coordinator of the Student Rights Council, told the Bengali Tribune: “There has been no collapse in the Student Rights Council. If one of the original four leaders lived in a separate part, it could be considered a total collapse. The people in whose hands this organization was founded are all together. Under whose leadership the General Council for the Protection of Student Rights of Bangladesh was declared under the above name, he was previously expelled from the council. We don’t think about him. It is not in our organization.
From the beginning, APM Suhel was actively involved in various movements as the leader of the Student Rights Council. When asked why he was expelled, Muhammad Rashed Khan told the Bengali Tribune: “Suhel has done many things against the discipline of the organization. Speaking of business from a Singaporean expat, he borrowed 50,000 rupees and did not pay it back. When he asked the money, Suhel threatened the expat with a BCL leader. We have proof of that. He was expelled from the organization after finding evidence of involvement in other similar activities. He also wanted to conspire within the organization, which is now visible.
When APM Suhail was asked about this, he said: “The allegations against me about the money are completely false. I will prove it. There is a lot of terrible information hidden in that organization, which I will tell later in the press conference with evidence.
Meanwhile, at the National Press Club on Thursday (October 15) morning, APM Suhel said: ‘The organization’s name was abbreviated at the inauguration of the organization’s third year on February 18. Many of us objected. After the expiration of Daksh’s mandate, three organizations, namely the Bangladesh Youth Rights Council, the Workers’ Rights Council and the Expatriate Rights Council, were announced with the intention of launching into politics. . We do not yet know the purposes and objectives of these organizations. As a result, resentment within the organization continues to grow. So many people object. But the process of making politics begins with a single decision.
Suhail further said: ‘The debut of this youth team deserves praise. But there are some horrible truths behind the mask that capitalize on the emotions of ordinary people. Almost everyone in the organization knows it. But nobody wants to reveal it.
It is worth mentioning that Nurul Haque Nur, a former Daksh vice president, told the Bangla Tribune in August this year that he wants to participate in the national elections. He then expressed his desire to be a candidate for deputy in the Dhaka-17 by-elections.
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