Antelope Valley Press

Why are youth protests sweeping Tunisia?

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TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — A growing groundswel­l of youth unrest, tapping into a well of economic frustratio­n, is sweeping Tunisia and worrying its leadership all the way to the top. It is, after all, the country that triggered the 2011 Arab Spring revolution­s.

A third of the North African nation’s young people are unemployed — and many are angry about their stagnant fortunes. For the fourth consecutiv­e day, they have taken to the streets in violent demonstrat­ions across the country of 11.7 million — from the capital of Tunis, to the cities of Kasserine, Gafsa, Sousse and Monastir.

The protests have led to a muscular response from authoritie­s who fear a repeat of the protests that led to the ousting of strongman President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali 10 years ago. The army has been deployed in four hot spots. Since Friday, protest groups that are growing in size by the day have been out in force every night. They are staging simultaneo­us, often-violent demonstrat­ions in cities around Tunisia.

The groups have been pelting municipal buildings with stones, throwing Molotov cocktails, looting, vandalizin­g and clashing with police. The precise causes are unclear, but the dire economic outlook of the stagnant North African country is at the heart of the dissatisfa­ction.

In this Jan. 18 file photo, face police officers during near Tunis. demonstrat­ors, background, clashes in Ibn Khaldoun City

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

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