At least 34 people lost their lives while numerous others have been injured as the student protest has intensified across Bangladesh by the non-cooperation movement announced by the Anti-Discrimination Students Movement on Sunday, reported Dhaka Tribune.
Protests outside the coaching institutes continued in Delhi's Old Rajender Nagar area for the eighth day on Sunday as students are demanding compensation from the government and the coaching centre for three UPSC aspirants who died due to a flooded basement at Rau's IAS Study Circle.
Student protests in Bangladesh took a new turn as the protesters who were demonstrating over quotas in government jobs, are now calling for a nationwide civil disobedience campaign until Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government resigns, reported Al Jazeera.
According to an official release, the enforcement teams have started inspecting and taking action against coaching centres operating in basements in all four zones.
Greater Noida (Uttar Pradesh) [India], August 3: Galgotias University proudly concludes its three-day space exhibition, in collaboration with the Space Applications Centre (SAC) of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), titled "Vikram Sarabhai Space Exhibition," held from August 1st
New Delhi [India], August 3: On the afternoon of July 31 at 4 PM, Nashik Aminya Electronics launched an aid event aimed at supporting underprivileged students at Suman Naik School in Nashik, Maharashtra. The event was organized by Amin Shaikh, the founder of Nashik Aminya Electronics, with f
The students have been protesting since July 27, when three civil services aspirants lost their lives in the basement of Rau's Rau's IAS Circle in Old Rajinder Nagar.
After the Delhi High Court on Friday transferred the investigation into the deaths of three UPSC aspirants in Rajinder Nagar to CBI, some students welcomed the decision, while others demanded a Judicial Magistrate inquiry into the case.
The Supreme Court on Friday said that the National Testing Agency (NTA) should avoid "flip-flops" in conducting the exams and observed that mishaps orchestrated by it were a luxury students cannot afford.
The Supreme Court on Friday said that the National Testing Agency (NTA) should avoid "flip-flops" in conducting the exams and observed that mishaps orchestrated by it were a luxury students cannot afford.
The study -- conducted both on Earth and aboard the International Space Station (ISS) -- was led by the students of the Shehakim School in Nahariya in collaboration with researchers from the University of Haifa and Oranim College