![Almost 150 people have been killed in Bangladesh amid ongoing protests about government quotas. Photo: AP PHOTO Almost 150 people have been killed in Bangladesh amid ongoing protests about government quotas. Photo: AP PHOTO](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/e1a74b89-f6ee-40f9-a93f-e0a9b98b6fdf.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Bangladesh has partially restored telecommunication services, days after deadly protests against reservations for government jobs killed almost 150 people.
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The country has mostly been calm since Sunday when the Supreme Court scaled down reservations for various categories to seven per cent, overruling a high court verdict reinstating a 56 per cent quota in government jobs that had been scrapped in 2018.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government on Tuesday said it would heed the Supreme Court ruling.
As demonstrations against the quotas - which included a 30 per cent reservation for family members of freedom fighters from the 1971 war of independence from Pakistan - tapered off on Wednesday, the government began easing the curfew imposed last week.
Restrictions will be relaxed for seven hours on Wednesday and offices will also be open from 11am to 3pm, officials said.
Residents of the capital Dhaka could be seen out on the streets on Wednesday morning as they made their way to their offices, with public buses also plying in some places - in sharp contrast to the violent clashes in the city last week.
Protesting students have given the government a fresh 48-hour ultimatum to fulfil four other conditions of an eight-point list of demands, and said they will announce next steps once that ends on Thursday.
The South Asian nation of 170 million was rocked by protests since the high court verdict last month, which left less than half of state jobs open on merit in a country where about 32 million young people are out of work or education.
Australian Associated Press