Arab News

Tunisian forces kill top aide of Al-Qaeda leader in Maghreb

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TUNIS: Tunisian security forces have killed a top aide of Abu Musab Abdul Wadud, the leader of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), an official source told Reuters.

Tunisia has been on high alert since 2015, when Daesh gunmen killed dozens of foreign tourists in a museum in Tunis and on a beach in the resort city of Sousse.

Algerian Bilel Kobi was “the right arm of Abou Wadoud” and was killed in an ambush near the Algerian border when on a mission to reorganize AQIM’s Tunisian branch following strikes by Tunisian forces against it, the source told Reuters.

Separately, reports say Tunisians are still taking to streets since they ousted their longtime ruler in the first of the Arab Spring uprisings.

Why, after so long, has the country been unable to tackle its problems?

Unemployme­nt, corruption and austerity measures in the 2018 budget have fueled widespread protests as the North African country marked the anniversar­y of the 2011 revolt that toppled longtime dictator Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali.

While Tunisia has been praised as a model of democratic transition, post-revolution government­s have struggled to improve living standards and tackle pervasive graft.

“Work, bread and national dignity” — that was the slogan that rallied Tunisian protesters in 2011.

But a growth rate that reached a moderate 2 percent in 2017 following years of stagnation, has barely dented the unemployme­nt figures, which remain stubbornly above 15

“There is a focus on services, including tourism, which create very precarious and seasonal jobs, to the detriment of agricultur­e, for example.”

If things continue as they are, he added, “we will find ourselves, like under Ben Ali, with growth at 5 percent and unemployme­nt at 15-18 percent.”

Adding to the pain of joblessnes­s, prices grew by 6 percent in 2017 as the dinar slid against the dollar and new taxes kicked in.

Many analysts expect further inflation this year.

 ??  ?? A police officer stands guard in Tunis. (File photo/Reuters)
A police officer stands guard in Tunis. (File photo/Reuters)

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