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Renewed clashes in Tunisia's deprived south
Tataouine, Tunisia, June 22 (AFP) Jun 22, 2020
Protesters demanding jobs and the release of an activist in Tunisia's marginalised south clashed Monday with security forces for a second straight day after weeks of tensions.

Police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of demonstrators who threw stones and burned tyres in the centre of Tataouine city, an AFP correspondent said.

Defence ministry spokesman Mohamed Zekri said the army was deployed outside state establishments.

Protesters in the region have been demanding authorities make good on a 2017 promise to provide jobs in the gas and oil sector to thousands of unemployed.

For weeks they have blocked roads and sought to prevent trucks from delivering supplies to the remote El-Kamour pumping station, but the protest had been largely peaceful.

"The government has no intention of keeping its promises. It wants to trample us," said Khalifa Bouhaouech, who is involved with the El-Kamour sit-in.

On Sunday, demonstrators in Tataouine city burned tyres and pelted security forces with stones to demand jobs and the release of activist Tarek Haddad, who was arrested the night before, as security forces responded with tear gas.

Haddad is a key figure in the protest movement.

The governor of Tataouine, Adel Werghi, said Haddad was "wanted" by the authorities, without providing further details.

Protesters denounced Haddad's arrest as "political".

The interior ministry said 10 people were arrested Sunday after a group of protesters tried to attack police stations with Molotov cocktails.


- Unkept promises -


"The protesters' demands are legitimate... as long as they do not obstruct state institutions," Employment Minister Fethi Belhaj said in a radio interview.

The government was committed to respecting the 2017 agreements, he added.

In 2017, protesters blockaded Tataouine's El-Kamour pumping station for three months demanding jobs.

The sit-in ended after the then employment minister signed a deal with representatives of the protesters, brokered by the UGTT, pledging to invest 80 million Tunisian dinars a year (almost $28 million) in Tataouine.

The UGTT branch in Tataouine said the promise was never kept.

President Kais Saied, who was in France on Monday, met with activists from the southern region earlier this year.

The powerful Tunisian trade union confederation UGTT had called for a general strike Monday in Tataouine, denouncing an "excessive and unjustified" use of force against protesters.

Shops were open but public services and state institutions remained closed in adherence to the strike, AFP correspondents said.

The protests come as Tunisia, until now largely spared the worst of the novel coronavirus, faces tensions within its coalition government and the impact of restrictions imposed to combat the spread of the pandemic that have accentuated inequalities.

Almost 10 years after the country's revolution, Tataouine -- where most of Tunisia's slim hydrocarbon resources are found -- is still underdeveloped, NGO Oxfam said in a new report.

The region was the worst-hit in the country for unemployment, at 28.7 percent, it said, and there were zero intensive care beds for every 10,000 people, compared to 10.2 in the capital, Tunis.


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