- Source: Abu Sayed (student activist)
Abu Sayed (Bengali: আবু সাঈদ; 1998/1999 – 16 July 2024) was a Bangladeshi student activist who was shot dead by the Bangladesh Police on 16 July 2024, while participating in the 2024 Bangladesh quota reform movement. Sayed was a student of Begum Rokeya University and was involved in the protest in front of the university when the police engaged in lathi charges and opened fire on the students.
Early life
Abu Sayed grew up in Babanpur village of Pirganj Upazila of Rangpur (then part of Rajshahi). His father is Maqbul Hossain and his mother is Monowara Begum. He was the youngest of a family of six brothers and three sisters. He won a talent pool scholarship from the local Jafor Para Government Primary School in the fifth grade. Later, he passed SSC with a Golden GPA-5 from Khalashpir Bilateral High School. After completing SSC, he received a scholarship from the Babylon Group, called the Babylon Scholarship Program, to complete his college education. Then he passed HSC from Rangpur Government College with a GPA-5. Later, he was admitted to the English department at Begum Rokeya University. He was a 12th batch student in English Department of Begum Rokeya University.
Activism
Abu Sayed was an activist of the quota reform movements of 2013 and 2018. After the new quota reform movement began on 6 June 2024, he became involved as the coordinator of the Anti-discrimination Students Movement at Rangpur Begum Rokeya University.
He published a Facebook post on 15 July 2024, referring to Mohammad Shamsuzzoha, a martyr in the 1969 East Pakistan mass uprising: Sir! We need you desperately at this moment, sir! All your contemporaries have passed away. Yet you remain immortal even in death. Your grave is an inspiration to us. We are invigorated in your spiritYou, too, will eventually succumb to death, according to the laws of nature. But as long as you live, live with a backbone. Support just demands, take to the streets, and stand as a shield for the students. You will receive genuine honor and respect. You will not fade into the annals of time upon your death. You will live forever as a Shamsuzzoha. Dying as a 'Shamsuzzoha' is far more joyous, honorable, and glorious.
Death and legacy
On 16 July, between 2:30 and 3:00 pm, quota reform protesters and police clashed in front of Begum Rokeya University. Police fired tear gas and baton-charged to disperse protesting students. Most of the students left while Abu Sayed remained. The police were firing rubber bullets from the opposite direction. Abu Sayed was subsequently shot four times by a police officer. He died before being taken to hospital.
Later on 28 October 2024, The Begum Rokeya University authorities temporarily suspended two teachers and seven staff members in connection with their involvement in the killing of Sayed.
Poet Shahidullah Faraji honored Abu Sayed by composing the poem বীর আবু সাঈদ (lit. 'Valiant Abu Sayed'), in which he hailed Sayed as the "hero of the generation." In tribute to his legacy, Rangpur Park intersection was renamed "Shaheed Abu Sayed Chatwar" by students in his honor.
On August 7, 2024, Shafiqur Rahman, Ameer of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, visited Sayed's grave in Rangpur to pay his respects. Following the exile of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the dissolution of her cabinet amid national uprising, interim Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus expressed that Sayed’s memory remained "in every person's heart in Bangladesh." Yunus also paid his respects at Sayed’s grave on August 10. The Chairman of the National Board of Revenue, Md Abdur Rahman Khan, went on to refer to Abu Sayed as “Bir Sreshtho” during a discussion at the NBR’s Multipurpose Hall in Dhaka.
Gallery
See also
July massacre
List of people killed in Bangladesh quota reform movement
Mir Mugdho
Farhan Faiyaaz
Golam Nafiz
Notes
References
External links
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Abu Sayed (student activist)
- 2024 in Bangladesh
- Anti-discrimination Students Movement
- Abu Sayeed
- Fahad Ahmad
- July massacre
- Student–People's uprising
- Mumia Abu-Jamal
- 2024 Bangladesh post-resignation violence
- List of people who died in the July massacre