TUNIS: Protesters threw stones at polices officers who repelled them with teargas in northern Tunisia yesterday after a peaceful rally to demand more jobs turned violent.
Two years after the revolution that toppled Zine Al-Abidine Ben Ali and inspired protests across the Arab world, increasing numbers of Tunisians are taking to the streets to demand economic development, disillusioned that their uprising has yet to provide prosperity and security.
The Islamist-led government that was elected after the veteran ruler fled has sought to revive the economy in the face of a decline in trade with the crisis-hit euro zone.
Witnesses said the marchers had tried to attack the police station in El Kef when the clashes broke out.
“Police fired teargas everywhere and beat protesters with sticks ... There are many cases of people suffering from the gas,” A resident from El Kef, told Reuters.
Another witness said there were violent clashes and teargas cloaked the town.
The farming town of about 45,000 people, about 180 km (110 miles) north of Tunis, has only a small number of factories and is keen for the government to invest in the area and create jobs. While the government forecasts 4.5 percent growth this year, up from an estimated 3.5 percent in 2012, unemployment has reached 17 percent.
Protests have started to gather pace in Tunisia again since November — the run up to December’s second anniversary of when a street peddler burned himself to death in despair at the confiscation of his fruit cart in the poor town of Sidi Bouzid.
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