HomeWorldBangladesh crisis deepens as bureaucracy boils over: SWAT deployed as civil servants revolt | Top updates

Bangladesh crisis deepens as bureaucracy boils over: SWAT deployed as civil servants revolt | Top updates

What began as a bureaucratic standoff is now fast becoming the latest flashpoint in a country already grappling with political chaos, public anger, and an unelected government facing legitimacy questions.

May 27, 2025 / 16:21 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Civil officials protest inside the Secretariat building in Dhaka on May 25, 2025, demanding the repeal of a government order giving it greater power to sack employees for disciplinary breaches.
Civil officials protest inside the Secretariat building in Dhaka on May 25, 2025, demanding the repeal of a government order giving it greater power to sack employees for disciplinary breaches.

The growing civil unrest in Bangladesh has entered a new phase. For the fourth straight day, government employees have crippled administrative functions at the heart of Dhaka, demanding the repeal of the Public Service (Amendment) Ordinance 2025 that allows for their dismissal without due process. The protest was called off at the secretariat after the government assured them it would review the contentious law, reported Daily Sun.

As elite SWAT teams and Border Guards stand watch outside the Secretariat, the protests reflect not just resistance to a controversial law, but a brewing revolt against the authority of the Yunus-led interim regime. What began as a bureaucratic standoff is now fast becoming the latest flashpoint in a country already grappling with political chaos, public anger, and an unelected government facing legitimacy questions.

Story continues below Advertisement

Background of the ordinance

The Public Service (Amendment) Ordinance 2025 amends the Public Service Act of 2018, introducing provisions that classify four types of conduct by government employees as misconduct, allowing for their dismissal without formal departmental proceedings. The government has stated that these amendments aim to streamline disciplinary actions and reduce bureaucratic delays.