Bangladesh is facing a severe crisis following the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, with twin jailbreaks resulting in at least 12 inmate deaths and hundreds more escaping, officials reported on Saturday.
As an interim government struggles to reestablish order, law enforcement efforts have been hindered by a police strike that began after Hasina’s abrupt departure from the country, ending her 15-year rule.
According to the AFP, the latest prison escapes occurred north of Dhaka during a week marked by escalating violence and unrest that culminated in Hasina’s ouster.
At Jamapur Prison on Thursday, six convicts were killed after prison guards were assaulted by escapees, warden Abu Fatah told AFP.
“They attacked us with iron rods and sharp weapons. They torched my office. Then tried to break out and take all 600 prisoners with them,” he said.
“We were forced to open fire. At least six inmates were killed including one who was stabbed to death.”
Fatah added that guards managed to quell the attack before anyone escaped.
On Tuesday, another six prisoners were shot dead during a mass breakout at a high-security prison in Kashimpur, just 30 kilometers north of Dhaka, warden Lutfor Rahman told AFP. Rahman said the inmates used iron tools and rebar rods to attack guards and broke through the jail’s main gate, forcing army soldiers and jail guards to open fire.
“At least 203 prisoners also managed to escape,” he said.
Rahman noted that none of the high-profile inmates, including Islamist extremists and murderers, had managed to break out of their cells.
Numerous attempted and successful jailbreaks have taken place across Bangladesh since protests against Hasina’s government began last month. More than 800 prisoners fled a jail in the central district of Narsingdi in July when a mob of thousands attacked the British colonial-era institution and set the warden’s office on fire. On Monday, the day of Hasina’s ouster, more than 500 inmates fled a jail in the northern district of Sherpur.
More than 450 people died during weeks of clashes between police and protesters leading up to Hasina’s ouster, including dozens of police officers. Police unions declared a strike on Tuesday and said officers would not resume duty until their safety was assured. More than half of the country’s police stations have since reopened, according to the force.