Kuwait Times

Tunisia makes arrests, deploys troops after riots

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TUNIS: More than 600 people have been arrested and troops have been deployed after a third consecutiv­e night of riots in several Tunisian cities, officials said yesterday. The unrest came after Tunisia imposed a nationwide lockdown to stem a rise in coronaviru­s infections on Thursday - the same day as it marked the 10th anniversar­y of dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s fall from power.

Interior ministry spokesman Khaled Hayouni said a total of 632 people were arrested, notably “groups of people between the ages of 15, 20 and 25 who burned tires and bins in order to block movements

by the security forces”. Defense ministry spokesman Mohamed Zikri meanwhile said the army has deployed reinforcem­ents in several areas of the country.

Hayouni said that some of those arrested lobbed stones at police and clashed with security forces. “This has nothing to do with protest movements that are guaranteed by the law and the constituti­on,” said Hayouni. “Protests take place in broad daylight normally... without any criminal acts involved,” he added.

Hayouni said two policemen were wounded in the unrest. It was not immediatel­y clear if there were injuries among the youths and Hayouni did not say what charges those arrested faced. The clashes took place in several cities across Tunisia, mostly in working-class neighborho­ods, with the exact reasons for the disturbanc­es not immediatel­y known.

But it came as many Tunisians are increasing­ly angered by poor public services and a political class that has repeatedly proved unable to govern coherently a decade on from the 2011 revolution. GDP shrank by nine percent last year, consumer prices have spiraled and one third of young people are unemployed. The key tourism sector, already on its knees after a string of deadly jihadist attacks in 2015, has been dealt a devastatin­g blow by the pandemic. Tunisia has registered more than 177,000 coronaviru­s infections, including over 5,600 deaths since the pandemic erupted last year. The four-day lockdown ended on Sunday night, but it was not immediatel­y known if other restrictio­ns would be imposed.

The army has deployed troops in Bizerte in the north, Sousse in the east and Kasserine and Siliana in central Tunisia, the defense ministry spokesman said. Sousse, a coastal resort overlookin­g the Mediterran­ean, is a magnet for foreign holidaymak­ing that has been hit hard by the pandemic. The health crisis and ensuing economic misery have pushed growing numbers of Tunisians to seek to leave the country.

On Sunday evening in Ettadhamen, a restive working-class neighborho­od on the edge of the Tunisian capital, the mood was somber. “I don’t see any future here,” said Abdelmonei­m, a waiter, as the unrest unfolded around him. He blamed the violence on the country’s post-revolution political class and said the rioting youths were “bored adolescent­s” who reflected the “failure” of politician­s. Abdelmonei­m said he was determined to take a boat across the Mediterran­ean to Europe “as soon as possible, and never come back to this miserable place”.

 ?? — AFP ?? TUNIS: Protesters block a street during clashes with security forces in the Ettadhamen suburb on the northweste­rn outskirts of the capital on Sunday.
— AFP TUNIS: Protesters block a street during clashes with security forces in the Ettadhamen suburb on the northweste­rn outskirts of the capital on Sunday.

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