Tag: Bangladesh ban social media

  • ‘Bangladesh is going to become the next Pakistan’; Sheikh Hasina’s son

    The Prime Minister of Bangladesh, Sheikh Hasina Wazed, resigned on Monday, fleeing the country as massive protests gripped the nation. The protests, that initially started as student protests against civil service job quotas metamorphosised into demands for Hasina to quit after more than 200 people were killed in violence.

    Hasina’s son Sajeeb Wazed, the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Advisor to the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, reacted to the developments by saying, “Bangladesh is going to become the next Pakistan.”

    He also said that his mother is very disappointed in the people of Bangladesh “Because after all she’s done…after all the development.”

    Siddhant Sibbal, correspondent at Wion News, asked Sajeeb whether his mother planned to return to power, to which he replied, “No, absolutely not. She is 77-years-old. This was going to be her last term, and she was going to retire after this anyway.”

    The journalist asked Hasina’s son whether he had plans to join the politics of Bangladesh in future, to which he replied laughingly, “No. My family has been through this three times. After this, we are done. We are tired of saving Bangladesh. Bangladesh can handle its own problems now. It’s not our problem.”

  • Bangladesh bans Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, YouTube, other social media platforms

    Bangladesh bans Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, YouTube, other social media platforms

    The government of Bangladesh has put a nationwide ban on Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp, YouTube, and other social media owned by Meta, as well as YouTube, Global Eye News confirmed on X (Formerly Twitter).

    This follows a previous shutdown of Meta’s platforms, like Facebook, Messenger, WhatsApp, and Instagram, from July 17 to July 31 due to protests about quota reforms.

    Mobile internet was first turned off on July 17, and broadband was shut down on July 18. Broadband services started working again after five days, on July 23, while mobile networks stayed off for ten days and were turned back on July 28.

    This new shutdown was announced shortly after Turkey banned Instagram.