He and a second leader, Asif Mahmud, 26, are two of the 17 ministers in the cabinet. Mahmud oversees the ministry of youth and sports. Islam heads the information technology ministry, which puts him in charge of the internet Hasina had shut down to try to halt the movement.
The student leaders say the country must break from the way it has been run for most of its history.
Since independence, power had swung between two dynastic political parties. It was an often violent and murderous rivalry.
Hasina’s father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, led the independence movement in 1971 and became the first prime minister of independent Bangladesh. Four years later, when he’d become president, he was assassinated in a military coup. These stories have been told in Bangladesh for generations, but they have much less meaning for young people than they did for their grandparents.
Student leader Mahfuj Alam, 26, says he’d like to see a new political settlement founded on three principles: dignity, compassion, and responsibility.
“This generation is really, really aspiring for real changes,” says Alam, “not mere talking or blabbering about some families, about some histories, about some glories.”