"Whenever I hear the sound of a car or a motorbike, I think it might be the police coming for me," the 33-year-old telecommunications graduate said.
When Hasan joined the protests in the capital, Dhaka, at the beginning of July, they were a peaceful affair. Students across the country had mobilised to oppose the reintroduction of quotas for all government jobs, which meant that 30% would go to descendants of those who had fought in the 1971 war of independence.
While this decision was made by the courts, it was seen by many as a thinly veiled political manoeuvre by the prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, who has a tight grip over the judiciary. The reintroduction of the quotas was widely seen to appease those in her Awami League - a party born out of Bangladesh's independence fight - who are much more likely to benefit, and to ensure Hasina could pack out the government with her own allies.
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