The Facebook IDs of Sarjis Alam and Hasnat Abdullah, coordinators of the quota movement protest, have been disappeared after giving posts on their Facebook.
The two coordinators along with four others were released from the custody of the Detective Branch of police on Thursday after six days.
After being released, they gave posts in their Facebook Ids.
But within sometime of giving the status, the Facebook IDs of the two mysteriously disappeared.
“Six people can be detained in DB custody for six days. But how can you detain the entire young generation of Bangladesh,” asked Sarjis Alam in the post.
He said, as long as the mass arrests, oppression, and torture continue, the students' movement will continue.
Around 5:30pm, Sarjis posted that post on his Facebook page.
His Facebook account disappeared an hour after sharing the post. His account was not visible.
Efforts are being made to get it back, said Sarjis.
Meanwhile, Hasnat wrote in his Facebook post: “None of us are free until the last person arrested in this movement is free. This mass arrest is the name of mass hatred. Our liberation will be complete only when the last person arrested in this movement is released. These mass arrests are not only the deprivation of the rights of innocent people; rather, it is a reflection of the cruelty imposed on our entire society. This is a terrible setback to freedom of thought and human rights.”
“Our movement is not only for the liberation of individuals; rather against discrimination, oppression, mass arrests, and torture of students. Our movement will continue till the last person arrested in this movement is released.”
The six coordinators of the quota reform movement were released from the custody of the Detective Branch (DB) of the Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) around 1:30pm.
They were taken to their homes by the agency's transport from the DB office on Thursday afternoon.
Badrul Islam, father of Nahid Islam, one of the coordinators of the movement, said that the coordinators' families were called around 6am to take them home.
Later in the afternoon, the coordinators were released from the DB office in the capital's Minto Road.


