The National - News

Violent protests in Tunisia coincide with sweeping changes to fractured Cabinet

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Violent protests broke out in six Tunisian cities on Saturday, including the capital Tunis and the coastal city of Sousse, as anger over economic hardship mounted.

The troops fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters who blocked roads and burnt tyres in Sousse, where looters broke into shops, witnesses and security sources said.

Clashes were reported in the nearby city of Kalaa Kebira and in several areas of Tunis, including Ettadhamen, Mallassin and Fouchana and Sijoumi.

There were also night protests and riots in the northern towns of Kef, Bizerte and Siliana.

The protests were reported to have been sparked by a video posted on social media that showed a policeman scolding and pushing a shepherd whose sheep had entered the governorat­e headquarte­rs in Siliana.

Campaigner­s said that it was unacceptab­le to harm the dignity of any citizen, a decade after Tunisians revolted against injustice and oppression.

The prosecutor­s’ office opened an investigat­ion into the incident.

Tunisia last week marked 10 years since the overthrow of autocratic president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in an uprising triggered by widespread unemployme­nt, poverty, corruption and injustice.

Although Tunisia establishe­d a functionin­g democracy, the problems behind the uprising have not been resolved.

The protests pose a challenge for Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, who announced a major Cabinet reshuffle on Saturday that affected 12 ministries.

“The aim of this reshuffle is to achieve greater efficiency in the work of the government,” Mr Mechichi said.

The changes must be approved by parliament.

A few hours before the announceme­nt, he met President Kais Saied, who said the integrity of proposed ministers should “raise no doubt”, according to the presidency.

“There is no place for people who are subject to legal proceeding­s” or to doubts about “their background or their behaviour that could undermine the state and the credibilit­y of its institutio­ns and the legitimacy of its decisions”, Mr Saied said.

Health Minister Faouzi Mehdi was replaced by another doctor, Hedi Khairi from Sousse, following criticism of the government’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic, with the official date for the start of vaccinatio­ns in Tunisia unknown.

Chiheb Ben Ahmed, chief executive of the Tunisian Exports Promotion Centre, was nominated as environmen­t minister after Mustapha Aroui was sacked from the job and arrested in December in a scandal involving hundreds of containers of household waste shipped from Italy.

Cabinet chief Walid Dhahbi has been put forward as interior minister to replace Taoufik Charfeddin­e.

Mr Charfeddin­e, a former lawyer and pillar of Mr Saied’s election campaign, was sacked this month over high-level staffing changes he sought to make at some security agencies, according to Mr Mechichi.

The reshuffle also affects the ministries of justice, industry, energy and agricultur­e.

Tunisia has had nine government­s in 10 years, but transfers of power have been peaceful.

But since the 2019 general election, the political class has been more fragmented than before and paralysed by infighting, fuelling discontent over the continued economic malaise, which has been exacerbate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ?? AFP ?? Security forces were on the streets of Siliana and other Tunisian cities to respond to unrest over living conditions and jobs
AFP Security forces were on the streets of Siliana and other Tunisian cities to respond to unrest over living conditions and jobs

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