‘We saw things we do not want to see’: Fear and trauma as 123 Malaysians evacuated from deadly protests in Bangladesh

The murder, which has resulted in an extraordinary communications blackout that has limited access to the internet and limited phone services, has been blamed on both sides.

Before the Malaysians landed, Mr Mahmudin Abas, 70, said he last heard from his 26-year-old girl Noorfaizzah on Friday before the computer was cut in Bangladesh.

Ms Noorfaizzah, a final-year medical scholar at Mymensingh Medical College, had planned to travel back to Malaysia on Thursday after the protests erupted, Mr Mahmudin said.

But on Thursday morning, she informed her father that traveling was very dangerous, and she was forced to leave her house close to college.

Mr. Mahmudin claimed that his daughter, who had not planned to stay, was trapped inside as nearby clashes raged outside. She claimed she had no stocked up on enough food. &nbsp,

” We started to panic. What if a woman had nowhere to go after a tower was destroyed? he said.

She also disclosed that one of her friends who were staying in the undergraduate hostel had already flown home a moment earlier. But she’s staying only near campus. But, there’s no guarantee of safety”.

Mr. Mahmudin and a group of Indonesian student parents went to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday to request assistance and for “quick activity” from the authorities.

They had already agreed to return the kids home as soon as possible, but they had n’t chosen to charter a flight, he said.

Mr. Mahmudin expressed relief and relief that his child was actually good after receiving confirmation from authorities that she had gotten to the evacuation flight.

Dr. Fadli Hamid, 53, the daughter of Ms. Fatihah’s father, said the parents began to intervene after hearing about rising food prices and scholar deaths as a result of the protests.

We decided that we could not do nothing and leave our children hanging when we learned that some Mymensingh Medical College students had also died ( in the protests ).

When asked about allegations that the authorities did not act quickly enough, Mr. Saifuddin claimed that the “bottom line” was that 123 Malaysians had arrived home safely.

” We sent a special trip there and they got up safely”, he said, adding that the removal operation was carried out” easily”.