Kuwait Times

For youth in Tunisia mining region, it’s ‘mine or die’

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METLAOUI, Tunisia: Dozens of unemployed youths camp out around phosphate mines in central Tunisia, demanding jobs as part of a wave of protests aimed at focusing attention on alleged state neglect. The surge in anger is the latest in the North African nation’s mining region, where one of the country’s highest unemployme­nt rates and a stark lack of infrastruc­ture have fuelled regular unrest.

The most recent confrontat­ions broke out at the end of January, with demonstrat­ors frustrated over hiring practices blocking work for six weeks. Among the grey dunes of phosphate at the Kef Eddour quarry near the town of Metlaoui, 10 women and about 50 young men-sons and grandsons of miners-eat and sleep in a few prefabrica­ted cabins.

“The phosphate company is the only thing here, we have no developmen­t, no jobs,” said Ali Ben Msalah, 25, who has been unemployed since finishing high school. “For us, the solution is either emigration, death or prison.” Next to him, Souad Smadah, 60, the daughter and wife of miners, nods as she warms couscous and tea over a fire for the young protesters.

She is angry that none of her five sons have managed to find work at the phosphate mines, accusing businessme­n and trade unions of prioritizi­ng their relatives when hiring. Smadah’s eldest earns 300 dinars ($125 or 100 euros) a month in a bakery, almost three-times less than a starting salary at the mine.

‘Little Paris’

Metlaoui is rich in phosphate, a highly sought after ore used to make fertiliser of which Tunisia is the world’s fourth largest producer. Boasting a swimming pool, cinema and tennis courts, it was once nicknamed “Little Paris”. Today, however, the town’s jobless youth loiter along cratered roads, their teeth yellowed from polluted water. The Gafsa Phosphate Company (CPG), a state monopoly, has long been the main source of jobs and income for the region.

Decades of corrupt or absent authoritie­s sparked mass protests around the mines in 2008 that were brutally repressed by dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. His fall in a 2011 uprising which sparked the Arab Spring upheavals sparked hope of change.

But there has been no sign of improvemen­t and a combinatio­n of lack of investment, skilled workers and unrest has even seen output nosedive. “Since the revolution, we can no longer produce the desired tonnage,” said CPG’s general secretary, Ali Khmili.

 ??  ?? Unemployed Tunisians sit at a phosphate production plant in Kef Eddour. — AFP
Unemployed Tunisians sit at a phosphate production plant in Kef Eddour. — AFP

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