Oman Daily Observer

Tunisian civil servants stage largest strike in years

Demonstrat­ions includes state employees from ministries, hospitals, public schools

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TUNIS: Tunisian civil servants staged the biggest general strike in five years on Thursday after their powerful trade union failed to secure wage hikes in tense negotiatio­ns with the government.

More than 3,000 people gathered outside parliament, responding to calls from the Tunisian General Labour Union (UGTT) for demonstrat­ions.

“The wage increase is not a favour” and “Tunisia is not for sale”, protesters chanted, also employing a popular slogan of the country’s 2011 revolution — “work, freedom, national dignity”.

The UGTT is demanding 673,000 state employees receive salary bumps equal to those granted this year to public companies, which range from 15 to 30 euros ($17-34) a month.

Bouali Mbarki, UGTT deputy secretary, said the wage increase “had not been taken into account in the 2019 state budget”.

Thursday’s strike, the biggest since 2013 and the first civil servant walkout over wages in decades, according to UGTT, included staff from ministries, hospitals and public schools.

The demands for wage hikes are tied to “an unpreceden­ted rise in prices, a deteriorat­ion of citizen purchasing power... and a degradatio­n of daily life,” Mbarki said.

Donors keeping Tunisia afloat have called on the government to control civil service salaries to avoid pushing up the public deficit.

But Mbarki said the government “must find a solution without being subjected to the instructio­ns of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) — even if it has made commitment­s with it — and preserve social stability”.

Mbarki said the union was “not negotiatin­g with (head of the IMF) Christine Lagarde) but with the head of the Tunisian government”, Prime Minister Youssef Chahed.

At the same time price hikes, fuelled in particular by the fall of the Tunisian dinar, combined with tax increases and stubborn unemployme­nt have spurred social discontent that escalated into riots across several cities in January.

In 2016, the IMF granted the North African country a 2.4-billion-euro loan over the span of four years in exchange for a promise to carry out economic reforms. In recent months, political life in Tunisia has been paralysed by power struggles ahead of presidenti­al elections set for 2019.

 ?? — AFP ?? A Tunisian protester holds a national flag and chants slogans during a civil servants general strike after the failure of negotiatio­ns with the government on salary increases in the capital Tunis.
— AFP A Tunisian protester holds a national flag and chants slogans during a civil servants general strike after the failure of negotiatio­ns with the government on salary increases in the capital Tunis.

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