Thousands of university students in Bangladesh have been staging protests against a recruitment system that they say favours children of war heroes and certain groups for high-paying government jobs.
The protesters say the system is discriminatory and they are calling for recruitment to be based on merit.
A third of posts are kept for the children of those who fought to win the country independence in 1971. Some are also reserved for women, ethnic minorities and the disabled.
Ms Hasina is the daughter of Bangladesh’s founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
Earlier this week, students blocked roads and highways in the capital Dhaka and other major cities, bringing traffic to a halt. The protests have been called the Bangla Blockade.
Some laid logs on a railway track in the capital, disrupting train services to northern parts of the country.
Bangladesh’s top court temporarily suspended the system on Wednesday, but protests are expected to continue until it is permanently removed.
The system was reinstated by a separate court just last month. It had been halted since 2018, following weeks of protests.
“We will not return to classrooms until our demand is met,” protest leader Rasel Ahmed told the AFP news agency.
“My demand is not to cancel the system. My demand is for quota reform,” one protester told BBC Bangla.
Another student said he would keep protesting until a “permanent solution” is found.
Government jobs are highly coveted in Bangladesh because they pay well. In total, more than half of the positions – amounting to hundreds of thousands – are reserved for certain groups.
Earlier this month, Ms Hasina condemned the protests, saying students were “wasting their time”, while adding there was “no justification for the anti-quota movement”.
Bangladesh, which was once one of the poorest countries in the world, is now one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia.
Its per capita income has tripled in the last decade and the World Bank estimates that more than 25 million people have been lifted out of poverty over the last two decades.
But its economy spun into turmoil in mid-2022 following the pandemic and the global economic slowdown.