First Published: 2012-10-02
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School teachers go on strike to
denounce arrest of protesters, hundreds demonstrate against government's
failure to improve living conditions.
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Middle East Online
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SIDI
BOUZID, Tunisia - Hundreds of people demonstrated in central Tunisia on
Monday against the government's failure to improve living conditions,
as teachers went on strike to denounce the arrest of protesters.
In
Sidi Bouzid, birthplace of last year's Tunisian revolution, protesters
marched through the town to the provincial government headquarters,
shouting slogans against the ruling Islamists and demanding the
governor's resignation, an AFP correspondent said.
The
social unrest also spread to the region of Kasserine, another key site
of the 2011 uprising, where a general strike in protest at
marginalisation and soaring unemployment paralysed the Laayoune
locality.
And a large number of secondary school
teachers refused to work on Monday in a gesture of solidarity towards
those detained last week.
A dozen people were arrested
last Wednesday, after several days of protests against unemployment and
the high cost of living, with more activists picked up the following
day.
A general strike was held on Saturday in the nearby locality of Menzel Bouzaiane to demand the release of the protesters.
Three
MPs from Sidi Bouzid announced that they were starting a hunger strike
at the National Constituent Assembly in Tunis to pressure the
authorities to free the protesters.
They also demanded,
in a statement, a halt to police and judicial proceedings against the
protesters and the resignation of the Sidi Bouzid governor.
Sidi
Bouzid is where the uprising began that toppled former dictator Zine El
Abidine Ben Ali and touched off the Arab Spring when a street vendor
immolated himself in December 2010 in protest over his own precarious
livelihood.
Poor living conditions, including high youth unemployment, were a driving factor behind the revolution.
The
Sidi Bouzid region, which is home to around 12,000 jobless graduates,
often sees protesters taking to the streets to condemn the Islamist-led
government for ignoring their grievances and failing to create jobs.
In
Laayoune, in the same central-western region, residents responded to
the call by trade unionists, NGOs and political parties to march in
protest at poverty, unemployment and marginalisation, an AFP journalist
reported.
"Laayoune has been marginalised by every
regime, by the current one just like the previous ones," said Ounaies
Laabidi, a trade union leader speaking at the demonstration.
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Wednesday, 3 October 2012
Protests, strikes hit central Tunisia
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