Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus has been appointed after mass student protests forced the nation’s prime minister to resign
Nobel Peace Prize-winning economist Muhammad Yunus, known as the “banker to the poor,” will head an interim government in Bangladesh following weeks of deadly demonstrations that forced Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to resign.
President of Bangladesh Mohammed Shahabuddin appointed Yunus, 84, on Tuesday – a day after the country’s government was overthrown amid violent protests against discriminatory job quotas. Sheikh Hasina, who resigned as prime minister on Monday, fled to neighboring India.
Yunus, the founder of microfinance lender Grameen Bank, announced on Wednesday that he had agreed to lead the temporary government, answering the call of student protesters.
“When I was contacted on behalf of the students, I didn’t agree at first. I told them I have a lot of work to finish. But the students repeatedly requested me,” the Daily Star quoted Yunus as saying.
“If the students can sacrifice so much, if the people of the country can sacrifice so much, then I also have some responsibility. Then I told the students that I can take the responsibility,” he added.
Read more
Born in Bangladesh, Yunus received a Fulbright scholarship to study economics at Vanderbilt University in the US, where he received a PhD in economics. He then became an assistant professor at Middle Tennessee State University before returning to Bangladesh to head the economics department at Chittagong University.