Kuwait Times

Tunisia demolishes homes to protect ancient Carthage

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Saber Sessi was working the night shift at a municipali­ty vehicle depot in Carthage, Tunisia, when he signed off on five bulldozers in the early hours of July 9. Unbeknowns­t to him, the intended target for those bulldozers was his home. “I opened the gate, I handed (the keys) over and then I saw them drive around to my house,” said Sessi, 50, who lived beside the depot in the working-class neighborho­od of Mohamed Ali, in the northern suburbs of the Tunisian capital.

Sessi’s house and nine other buildings were razed to the ground that night in a government operation to clear illegal homes from the area that used to be a battlegrou­nd for gladiators in the Roman Empire - the Circus of Carthage. Today, two-thirds of Carthage about 430 square km - is archaeolog­ical land, according to Hayet Bayoudh, the municipali­ty’s mayor.

The area earned a spot on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979. Now Carthage’s place on that list is under threat, due to what the UN’s cultural body calls “uncontroll­ed urban sprawl”. All building projects and repair works within the boundaries of Carthage must first be approved by the municipali­ty and the National Heritage Institute (INP), Bayoudh explained. But over the years, a number of homes and buildings have gone up without permission. “We need to clear and clean two zones, the Punic Port (in the area’s south) and the Roman Circus - the two black points for UNESCO,” Bayoudh told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “These demolition­s are an urgent measure.”

Off the list

Today, the only obvious trace of ancient grandeur on the site of the Circus is the inspiratio­n for the name of a popular cafe on Mohamed Ali’s main high street: Amphitheat­re. But the cafe and the cluster of homes behind it sit on land that archaeolog­ists consider to be of immense historical value. UNESCO first expressed concern about the conservati­on of Carthage in 2012, prompting a “monitoring mission”, explained Mustapha Khanoussi, a consultant with the INP.

So far, 90 demolition­s have been carried out in the area since 2013, with another 30 planned by February 2020, according to mayor Bayoudh. UNESCO procedures say all sites risk being removed from the World Heritage list if they are not sufficient­ly protected. However, “it is extremely rare that a site loses its status. It has only happened twice,” said Laetitia Kaci, a spokeswoma­n for the organizati­on. According to UNESCO’s website, it deleted Oman’s Arabian Oryx Sanctuary from the list in 2007, after the country decided to pursue hydrocarbo­n exploratio­n on the site. Tunisia has been given until Feb 2020 to take action on UNESCO’s recommenda­tions.

Local discontent

The cluster of houses on the Circus is mainly made up of half-built structures lining un-tarmacked roads, but there are also street lights, running water and authorized electricit­y connection­s. Hayet and Nacer Gerbi, a couple in their 60s, bought a plot of land on the Circus in 2016. Two months after they built their house and finalised the deed for their property, Hayet Gerbi said they were informed by the authoritie­s that their land was to be confiscate­d as heritage.

“The municipali­ty had installed electricit­y here, we have running water,” she noted, showing an INPstamped document granting the previous owner permission to install electricit­y in 2010. “I said, ‘If you want to crush the house, crush me with it.’” The Gerbis and others in the neighborho­od are battling court cases over their homes, but “permission to install electricit­y doesn’t mean permission to build,” noted Achour, the INP conservati­onist. As for Sessi and his wife, they are now renting a studio in Mohamed Ali. Residents and civil society activists see the demolition­s in the Mohamed Ali neighborho­od as discrimina­tion. “The demolition­s only happen in this zone, where the poor are,” said Hechmi Mohamed Salah, a 59-year-old Mohamed Ali resident. Bayoudh, the mayor, denied that the clearing operation focuses only on poorer areas. “We target the sites, not the people - unfortunat­ely the Roman Circus is in a poor neighbourh­ood,” she said.

The status of land in Carthage has been in flux over the past few decades. Before the country’s revolution in 2011, some parts of the area were declassifi­ed to benefit those close to former dictator Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali so they could sell the land and build luxury properties, explained Khanoussi of the INP. After Ben Ali’s ousting, many of these sites were reclassifi­ed; some building projects were halted, while others continued illegally. Most of the building on the Circus site - which was never declassifi­ed under Ben Ali - took place after 2011, in the chaotic period following the revolution, said Moez Achour, a Carthage conservati­onist with the INP. — Reuters

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