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Originally Posted by Al Jazeera
Does anybody know whether there are any serious left-wing underground movements in Tunisia? It seems there is a ripe recruiting ground for them.Originally Posted by BBC News
[FONT="Fixedsys"]History is not like some individual person which uses men to achieve its ends. History is nothing but the actions of men in pursuit of their ends. - Karl Marx.
Only sound common sense, respectable fellow that he is in the homely realm of his own four walls, has very wonderful adventures directly he ventures out into the wide world of research. - Friedrich Engels.
I am by heritage a Jew, by citizenship a Swiss, and by makeup a human being, and only a human being, without any special attachment to any state or national entity whatsoever. - Albert Einstein.[/FONT]
Aljazeera
Tunisia: The battle of Sidi Bouzid
Poor economic policies have led to widespread distress as Tunisia's youth take their frustrations to the streets.
Larbi Sadiki Last Modified: 27 Dec 2010 15:27 GMT
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[FONT=Verdana][FONT=Verdana]The economic policies as championed by the 'Washington Consensus' have manifested in unbearable levels of unemployment, a core factor behind the latest rounds of street protests [AFP] [/FONT][/FONT]What happened to the state? Where did civil society go? Why is there only silence from Development Minister Mohamed Nouri Jouini?
Before even attempting to answer each one of those questions, these seemingly dysfunctional institutions need to be inspected more closely in order to see the extent to which they share responsibility for the suicidal protests of despair by Tunisia’s youth.
This is a not time for scoring political points. What Wikileaks says or does not say about Tunisia’s ruling familiy serves no purpose here. This is a time for reflection on Tunisia’s own ‘wretched of the earth’ – the ‘khobz-istes’ of Sidi Bouzid and the country’s disenfranchised youth.
The Khobz-istes (the jobless) strike back
Putting Rousseau’s notion of a ‘social contract’ and Arab politics in the same phrase is to ask for an oxymoron. Tunisia’s politics is no exception. But there is another type of contract which has nothing to do with Rousseau: The ‘bread contract' - bread in parts of Tunisia and Egypt are called ‘eish, dear 'life' itself.
The tacit contract that has defined the North African country since its independence in 1956 is the ‘bread’ provision - mostly subsidies - in return for political deference. With modest resources, Tunisia has historically funded subsidies of strategic commodities - bread, sugar, tea, coffee, kerosene - and education, health, housing in some cases, and even recreational activities, such as sport.
The National Solidarity Fund and the National Employment Fund, still under centralised control, have had some successes. They have partly shifted the burden of providence from the state to society.
Tunisians dug into their pockets to volunteer what little of their non-disposable income they have to the cause of poverty alleviation, and improvements of the so-called ‘shadow zones’ (bidon-villes), the misery belt suffocating the rich towns and suburbs.
But even this system of quid pro quo bread and political deference has failed many Tunisians, leaving many hopeless and jobless.
Bou’azizi’s letter to President Bin Ali
It is a national tragedy when the youth - literally the future - commit suicide to make a point.
The despair must have been unimaginable when a university graduate, 26-year-old Mohamed Bou’azizi, was prevented from earning an honest living peddling fruits and vegetables. It is humiliating enough to do that.
He doused himself in petrol and set himself aflame on December 17. If he survives his horrific burns, he will now live with physical and emotional pain for the rest of his life.
Irrational as it might have been, it was a cry for help, and a message to his state and his president to act.
The police tend to intercept these cries for help, seemingly able to diagnose all the psychological damage done to tens of thousands of Bou'azizis with the prescription of a handy baton and a badge. But for the local authorities to confiscate his cart or stall is to add insult to injury.
Bou’azizi’s message was seconded by another suicidal signature of another young man in his mid-twenties, Lahseen Naji, who electrocuted himself in despair of ‘hunger and joblessness’. A third, Ramzi Al-Abboudi, under the burden of business debt, ironically made possible by the country’s micro-credit solidarity programme, killed himself.
Added to these signatures to Bou’azizi’s letter to Mr Bin Ali are the spontaneous riots of Sidi Bouzid and surrounding towns.
Tunisia's long winter of discontent
Like many developing states, Tunisia jumped onto the ‘Washington consensus’ bandwagon, which led to fiscal, political and social adjustments.
This led to a decrease in subsidies, privatization, poor convertibility of the dinar, vast land sales with foreign ownership of real estate, tourist resort leasing, nouveaux riches consumption patterns, big business commissions, business monopolies and corruption.
Inevitably, the clouds gathering over the skies of Tunisia’s winter of discontent have started the tell-tale signs of a deluge of ills symptomatic of a quasi ‘banana republic’.
The marginalization of the agrarian and arid central and southern areas will continue unabated. Some of this is due to nature (poor soil and low rainfall), and some to nurture (state neglect and weak entrepreneurship by Tunisia’s industrial and commercial elites).
The state is a control-freak to the point that it disallows the existence of any hint of an informal economy. There is one in Italy - even in America - but not in Tunisia. If the state is partly failing in its provision of jobs, then it is unwise to ban informal trade and work.
A youth empowered by education but disempowered by marginalization can be the spark that ignites social upheaval and social tension.
In Tunisia, marginalization is today being translated into irrational and tragic suicides. But tomorrow these can be the triggers of a different type of suicides.
Does Minister Jouini want to be held responsible for this?
'North' vs 'South'
A stroll in the boulevards, leisure and sports centres, rich esplanades and shopping malls of the green coastal areas reveals a Tunisia that looks and feels like a land of geniality, of delight - in official propaganda parlance, a ‘model’ of development worthy of emulation.
The models of development and distribution applied to the country’s coastal and northern cities, towns and suburbs are nowhere to be seen in the centre or the south. The riots of Sidi Bouzid and surrounding towns call into question years of uneven development and mis-distribution.
They challenge policy-makers to rethink redistributive justice and regional development urgently.
But today the notion of ‘total state’ and ‘total politics’ may not be apt for successful social engineering and re-distribution. Total control can translate into loss of control. The signs are there.
From the central phosphates Basin towns via Sidi Bouzid to Ben Guerdane, the cracks on the current developmental model are showing.
The puzzle of Tunisia is that it insists upon belt-fastening whilst, for a while, cruising at a high altitude (i.e. stability, development). It is time to unfasten belts and let society, NGOS, entrepreneurs, the informal economy, political parties, local initiatives, and autonomous charities share the burden of development with the state.
The State: What to do?
If Mr Ben Ali is not sacking his Development Minister, then he needs to demand a new course of action from his foreign, development, employment and education ministers, along with new, implementable policies.
Alternatively, he can face the gale of a long winter of discontent, because a paltry eight million Euros will not satisify the needs of Sidi Bouzid and surrounding towns.
Sidi Bouzid has been kind to Tunisia by producing high quality agricultural produce, like milk. The Tunisian government can pay back this debt in the form of just economic and civic redistribution to the region’s youth.
Perhaps Tunisia has to rethink their heavy and sole reliance on the European Union. With the Union of the Mediterranean nearly defunct, and the EU openly favouring eastern European labour, Libya and the Arab Gulf may be able to relieve the long queues of the jobless. This works for the other Arab nations, so why not Tunisia? Tunisia can adjust too.
The President must at once lift the siege on Sidi Bouzid, and show courage by visiting these marginalized towns himself. It is high time Mr Bin Ali revamped his government with new blood.
Maybe non-ruling party independents and other competent figures can pluralize the pool of ideas available to him.
Finally, the president is strongly advised to recall a simple truth and a time-hardened adage: a fight against those who have nothing to lose is unwinnable!
Civil society and the opposition
The return of the Khobz-istes must not be turned into political football. Both the opposition and the state have failed Sidi Bouzid and Tunisia’s jobless youth. The path forward is not through propaganda and hollow lectures.
Rather, youth calls of despair for civic engagement should be heeded in Tunisia, not punished with political absence or exile. They need practical solutions, not slogans.
This should be a moment for all the Bou’azizis of Tunisia. If need be, pay the price of peaceful democratic struggle. Indefinite absence and exile do not earn democracy but animosity.
It is not a moment about Moncef Marzouki, Nahdah or the ruling party. From the comfortable distance of Paris and London, the exiled opposition is as remote from Tunisia’s people as the incompetent ministries who seem to have missed socio-economic problems right under their noses.
Together with the state, and entrepreneurs they can think of specific solidarity funds for these regions, specific investment, job searches in the Arab Gulf, or even bursaries for those willing to continue with higher education.
Able expatriates and local civil society can be part of the solution. Only thus they will also learn how to reformulate the political equation inside Tunisia.
The Battle of Sidi Bouzid redux
In 1943 Sidi Bouzid was the theatre of another battle: a battle for freedom by the Allied forces against the Nazis.
Today it is the theatre of another battle. A battle for freedom from hunger.
Bou’azizi comes to mind when reading the words from Tunisia’s national anthem: ‘We die, we die, so that the homeland lives.’
Minister Jouini must contemplate the real and intended meaning of these words for the remainder of his tenure in the Ministry of Development (of under-development) in the areas he, his aides, and their predecessors have for so long neglected.
Lest graduate Bou’azizi and other marginals are forgotten, state and society must hold up a mirror to see whether the face of mis-distribution and uneven development today reflects an alien value of moral decay; 'We live, we live, so that the homeland dies...'
Dr Larbi Sadiki is a Senior Lecturer in Middle East Politics at the University of Exeter, and author of Arab Democratisation: Elections without Democracy (Oxford University Press, 2009) and The Search for Arab Democracy: Discourses and Counter-Discourses (Columbia University Press, 2004), forthcoming Hamas and the Political Process (2011).
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth...811755739.html
the Tunisian Workers' Communist Party which is illegal member of the International Conference of Marxist-Leninist Parties and Organizations (Unity & Struggle). from wiki: The Tunisian Workers' Communist Party (Parti communiste des ouvriers tunisiens, PCOT) is a proscribed communist political party led by Hamma Hammami. PCOT is described by its co-thinkers in France as "constituting the most important opposition force" in Tunisia. Hammami was arrested and sentenced to over four years in prison for contempt of court, and reports that he was "savagely tortured." He was given additional sentences of eleven years and five years for, among other things, membership in an illegal organisation and distribution of propaganda.7 At least ten of his books are banned. Hammami's wife, Radhia Nasraoui, a human rights lawyer and also an outspoken opponent of President Ben Ali, went on a 57-day hunger strike in late 2003 to protest official surveillance of her home and communications
the old Soviet backed party is called Movement Ettajdid, seems to be content with running for Parliament.
Videos of the protests:
+ YouTube Video
Appearently a "flash mob" the governments worried about.
+ WAkRqA&rel" title="View this video at YouTube in a new window or tab" target="_blank">YouTube Video
Police Attack protesters
Last edited by theAnarch; 6th January 2011 at 16:08.
Protests spread to Algeria;
Street vendor’s attempted suicide sparks riots and police shootings
www.socialistworld.net, 29/12/2010
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI
Lack of freedom and mass unemployment stoke up revolt
S.R., CWI reporter and recent visitor to Tunisia
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Over the last few days, Tunisian youths have clashed with police, in riots sparked by anger over unemployment in the provincial town of Sidi Bouzid.
The nightly disturbances started after an unemployed graduate set himself alight in a protest against police officers who confiscated fruit and vegetable he was selling from a market stall. There were clashes last Monday when youth held protests to demand the release of dozens of people arrested earlier.
Any form of opposition is rare in Tunisia under the repressive rule of President Zein Al Abidine ben Ali. Although Tunisia’s economy is expected to grow by 3.8% in 2010, it will make little difference to the 14% jobless figure, which fires much of the protests and riots.
Below, a CWI member, S.R., who recently visited Tunisia, reports on the clashes over the last few days.
Socialistworld.net
Large clashes took place in Tunisia between youth and state security forces on 25 December. These are the biggest protests since action by miners in Redeyef in 2008. The new protests were triggered when on17 December, in the central town of Sidi Bouzid, Mohamed Bou’azizi, a street vendor of cheap plastic toys/ vegetables was asked by the police for a permit to sell. He replied that he had a diploma and wanted to have a skilled job instead. The police confiscated Mohamed Bou’azizi’s goods and assaulted him. Mohamed Bou’azizi then bought gasoline with his last money and attempted to commit suicide by burning himself alive in front of the Sidi Bouzid City Hall.
Since then, there have been daily demonstrations in the small town, which soon spread to neighboring cities. The 25th December saw a demonstration in Menzel Bouzaiene, during which riots broke out, police cars were set on fire, and the police shot 18-year old Mohamed Ammari and seventeen others were seriously injured. Families were prevented from seeing their relatives in the hospitals and the city was sealed off. No one was allowed to go in or out of the city and telephone and water and electricity was cut off.
On 26 December, there were attempted solidarity demonstrations in Tunis, Gabes and Sfax cities. People gathered in the trade union offices but heavily armed policemen would not let them leave the buildings and hold protests.
On 28 December, there were reports of demonstrations in the capital, Tunis, and five other cities, even on the small fisherman’s island of Qarqannah.
Lack of freedoms
Demonstrations are rarely seen in the virtual police state of Tunisia (the country has 400,000 police, including national guard and secret police, in a country with a population of 10 million). During the time was I there, no-one had seen a demonstration before. No-one would not speak about the rule of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, even in private. He has been in office for 23 years. His pictures are everywhere on the streets, in cafes and in shops. No meaningful opposition is allowed. The internet is censored, with the same blocking mechanisms that are used as in China and Iran. Many websites are not accessible and pictures on Facebook showing Mohamed Bou’azizi burning himself in protest were replaced by a picture of the president!
The people I spoke to were deeply frustrated with the lack of freedoms - and that was mainly in more or less the wealthy parts of the country, let alone the poorer south. Many youth see their only prospects lie in leaving the country and many have illusions in getting a better life in Europe. But visas are hard to obtain, with the EU states closing their borders to Tunisia. In the countryside, unemployment is very high. National joblessness sits at 18% and as these are government figures, the real situation is much worse. Years of privatizations, nepotism and corruption have made the President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and his elite friends richer, while destroying the future of the youth.
The government will try to suppress the opposition movement developing. There are reports of police raiding homes at night. It is important to encourage working people and youth to continue their fight for freedom and jobs. Send solidarity messages to the UGTT trade union (www.ugtt.org.tn) and send protests to your nearest Tunisian embassy.
"I want to say sweet, silly things." - V.I Lenin
That's insane.
"Win, lose or draw...long as you squabble and you get down, that's gangsta."
http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/pos...ns_for_ben_ali
some of this article is good, especially the work people are doing in the unions, does anyone know anymore about the UGT? But the last paragraph seems to be calling for a populist movement that seems nothing more than Liberal.
"Direct Action is a notion of such clarity, of such self-evident transparency, that merely to speak the words defines and explains them. It means that the working class, in constant rebellion against the existing state of affairs, expects nothing from outside people, powers or forces, but rather creates its own conditions of struggle and looks to itself for its means of action. It means that, against the existing society which recognises only the citizen, rises the producer. And that that producer, having grasped that any social grouping models itself upon its system of production, intends to attack directly the capitalist mode of production in order to transform it, by eliminating the employer and thereby achieving sovereignty in the workshop – the essential condition for the enjoyment of real freedom.” Emile Pouget
Tunisia arrests bloggers and rapper Dissidents were arrested or "disappeared" in crackdowns against what is being described as a national uprising.
Last Modified: 07 Jan 2011 20:37 GMT
[FONT=Verdana][FONT=Verdana]Journalists and activists face violence and arrest in the uprising that began on December 17 [AFP][/FONT][/FONT]
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[/FONT]Tunisian authorities have rounded up bloggers, activists and a rap singer in a string of arrests that come in the midst of what is being described as a nationwide uprising.
Two web activists, Slim Amamou and Azyz Amamy, have not been heard from since Thursday, sources in Tunisia told Al Jazeera.
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said that it had been alerted that at least six bloggers and activists had been arrested or had disappeared in locations across Tunisia, and that there were probably others who had been targeted.
Al Jazeera spoke with Amamy on Wednesday evening, local time, after his email and Facebook accounts were hijacked in an alleged government-led "phishing" campaign. His last tweet was published on Thursday morning, as was Amamou's.
Amamy's phone was disconnected on Friday night when Al Jazeera tried to reach him.
Hamadi Kaloutcha was arrested at 6am local time by police dressed in civilian clothing. His laptop and hard drive were also taken, according to RSF. The police officers told his wife that they had "a few questions to ask him" and that it would take a few hours.
Another cyberdissident, Sleh Edine Kchouk, linked to the Tunisian General Students’ Union (UGET) was taken in for questioning in the town Bizerte and had his computer confiscated.
As of Friday evening, he had not been released, sources confirmed.
The arrests come in the context of a "cyberwar" between the Tunisian authorities and web activists, who have been struggling to break through the country’s extensive censorship wall.
International web activists from Anonymous have launched "distributed denial of service" (DDoS) attacks on government-linked websites during the past week.
'Muffling discontent'
Local journalists are facing violence and arrest as they try to cover the "unprecedented" protests that began on December 17.
"We are asking for the release of all those who are in jail for just telling the story of what is going on in their country," Jean-Francois Julliard, the head of RSF, said.
"And we are asking above all for journalists to have access to what is going on in the country at the moment."
Julliard said it was unacceptable that the Tunisian authorities have refused to allow a correspondent from the newspaper Le Monde into the country.
"We are worried, worried because we feel that there is a toughening of the situation," Julliard said.
"President [Zine El Abidine] Ben Ali … only wants to muffle this discontent as soon as possible, he wants his country to go back to this image of a tourist paradise, the beaches, security, peace and so on, so I think he's ready to do anything."
The Committee to Protect Journalists said it was "disturbed" by the Tunisian government's attempts to censor coverage of the protests, citing violence against journalists, newspapers being pulled from shelves and the blocking of websites.
"We are also alarmed by the shrill government-orchestrated campaign against Al Jazeera," the CPJ said in an open letter to Ben Ali.
"We call on your government to present its views on the air, as it has been invited to do by media outlets on countless occasions, instead of attacking news organisations for simply performing their duties."
Rap singer arrested
Tunisian police have arrested a rap singer who made a song critical of government policies as protests against President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali's rule continue to shake the North African nation, his brother said on Friday.
[FONT=Verdana]Video that led to The General's arrest[/FONT]
Hamada Ben-Amor, a 22-year-old rapper, was taken from his home in the Mediterranean Sea coast city of Sfax late on Thursday, his brother Hamdi Ben-Amor said.
"Some 30 plainclothes policemen came to our house to arrest Hamada and took him away without ever telling us where to. When we asked why they were arresting him, they said 'he knows why'," he said.
Ben-Amor is known to fans as "The General".
Last week he released a song on the internet titled 'President, your people are dying' that talks about the problems of the youth and unemployment.
The song came out as students, professionals and youths mounted a series of protests over a shortage of jobs and restrictions on public freedoms.
The protests have grown into the most widespread and violent flare-up of dissent of Ben Ali's 23-year rule.
Tunisian officials had no immediate comment on any of the arrests.
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/af...360234492.html
The Swedish Pirate Party has been calling for sanctions against Tunisia, due to the incarceration of two members of the Tunisian Pirate Party.
Pirate party? Huh?
"Face the world like a roaring blaze, before all the tears begin to turn silent. Burn down everything that stands in our way. Bang the drum."
TUNISIA: AT LEAST 20 KILLED IN PROTESTS
AlJazeera.net
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[FONT=Verdana,Arial]Protesters killed in Tunisia riots[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]At least 20 people have been killed as demonstrators clashed with security forces in Tala and Kasserine.[/FONT]
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[FONT=Verdana,Arial]At least 20 people have been killed in clashes with police in a two cities in Tunisia.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]Six people were killed and another six wounded in the city of Tala, 200km southwest of the capital Tunis, on Saturday, after security forces opened fire on protesters.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]Another 14 people were killed in similar clashes in the Kasserine region, union sources told Al Jazeera.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]Belgacem Sayhi, a teacher and trade union activist, told the AFP news agency that the victims in Tala were between 17 and 30 years old, and were killed when the police opened fire on the crowd. [/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]The government has put the death toll after the Tala riots at two.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]"The police opened fire in legitimate self-defence and this led to two dead and eight wounded, as well as several wounded among police, three of them seriously," a government statement said.[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana,Arial]An employee at a hospital in Tala told Reuters that several people had been admitted to the hospital after the clashes, and other witnesses said that six people who were in critical condition have been moved to the regional capital, Kasserine.[/FONT]
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[FONT=Verdana,Arial]Police attacked[/FONT]
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[FONT=Verdana,Arial]Witnesses said police fired their weapons after using water cannons to try to disperse a crowd which had set fire to a government building. The crowd has also thrown stones and petrol bombs at police.[/FONT][FONT=Verdana,Arial]
There had already been unrest in Tala on Friday, with protesters attacking a bank and official buildings, and setting them on fire, Sadok Mahmoudi, a union leader, told AFP news agency.
French police confirmed that a "small explosion" occurred at the Tunisian consulate in a Paris suburb early on Sunday morning.
The blast took place at the consulate in Pantin, and caused "minor damage to the consulates metal shutters", police said.
Raouf Najar, Tunisia's ambassador to France, said in a statement: "The disinformation these past few days on what is happening in Tunisia is such that anything is possible, even this terrorist act."
The consulate reopened for business later on Sunday morning, with a police guard posted outside.
On Saturday, troops were deployed to the area for the first time since the start of the recent wave of unrest which has been in protest at high levels of youth unemployment.
The soldiers were assigned to protect public buildings, said Mahmoudi.
Protests sparked by high youth unemployment have spread from the central town of Sidi Bouzid to other parts chiefly in the north African country's interior, which lags behind the more prosperous coastal areas.
Union protest
On Saturday, the Tunisian General Union of Labour (UGTT), the country's main union, condemned the authorities for their heavy-handed response to protesters.
Several hundred UGTT members gathered in Tunis to observe a minute's silence for those who have died since protests began.
"We support the demands of the people in Sidi Bouzid and interior regions," said Abid Brigui, deputy general secretary of the union, which is considered to be close to the government.
Last week, a 26-year-old Tunisian man who set off a wave of protests after attempting to commit suicide by setting himself on fire last month died of third-degree burns in hospital.
Zine al Abidine Ben Ali , the Tunisian president, has said the violent protests are unacceptable and could harm the country's interests by discouraging investors and tourists who provide a large part of the country's revenues.
Protests traditionally have been rare in Tunisia, which has had only two presidents since independence from France 55 years ago.
The country has in the past been praised by Western allies as a model of stability and prosperity in the Arab world.
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[FONT=Verdana,Arial]:: Article nr. 73729 sent on 09-jan-2011 16:37 ECT[/FONT]
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/dpaje/s...7625658761967/
10 January 2011 Last updated at 10:23
Fourteen killed in Tunisia unemployment protests
Three towns have been caught up in the latest wave of protests
Continue reading the main story Related stories
The number of people killed in unrest over unemployment in Tunisia over the weekend has risen to 14, officials say.
The deaths occurred in the towns of Thala, Kasserine and Regueb, in the west and centre of the country.
An interior ministry statement said that in Thala and Kasserine, police had fired in self-defence after rioters attacked public buildings.
The protests first broke out in December over a lack of freedom and jobs.
Tunisia's official news agency Tap said five people had died as a result of clashes in the western town of Thala on Saturday night, and five had been killed in nearby Kasserine.
"Several government buildings in Kasserine were attacked by groups who set fire to and destroyed three banks, a police station and a filling station and set fire to a police vehicle," the statement said.
"The police fired in the air but the crowds continued, and the police acted out of legitimate self-defence."
Four people were killed in Regueb, near the central town of Sidi Bouzid, Tap said.
Protesters say the total number of casualties is higher than officials have admitted.
The leader of the opposition Progressive Democratic Party, Ahmed Najib Chebbi, said he believed at least 20 people had been killed in clashes in the three towns.
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Adnan el Ameri, a member of Tunisia's general labour union and a human rights activist, says the protesters have faced a tough response from the security forces.
"The youth were protesting against their social situation and unemployment... but security forces confronted them with brutality and real bullets. Six people were killed in Kasserine, and eight in Thala."
Separately, the authorities have released a rap singer, Hamada Ben-Amor, who was held last week in Sfax after recording a song critical of the government, the rapper's family told Reuters news agency.
'Ceasefire' call
Mr Chebbi called on Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to "call an immediate ceasefire to spare the lives of innocent citizens and respect their right to protest".
The demonstrations began after a man set fire to himself on 17 December in Sidi Bouzid to protest against the police confiscating fruit and vegetables that he was selling without a permit.
He died on Tuesday, while another man is reported to have electrocuted himself as part of the protests.
Demonstrations are rare in Tunisia, where there are tight controls aimed at preventing dissent. The unrest has been linked to frustrations with the president and the ruling elite.
On Friday, the US expressed concern over the government's handling of the demonstrations.
Correspondents say the riots in Tunisia appear to have inspired similar violent protests in Algeria over food prices - forcing the government there to impose a cut on the price of some basic goods. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12144906
TUNISIA: Schools shut down as protests continue; president promises jobs
LA-LA TIMES January 10, 2011 | 3:53 pm
Riots and protests continued Monday across Tunisia with opposition sources saying as many as 24 people have been killed in clashes between police and youths angry over unemployment and a lack of political freedom under the reign of President Zine el Abidine ben Ali, who took to the airwaves in an attempt to calm the nation.
In an "I-feel-your-pain" gambit, he promised to create 300,000 new jobs. But he also took a hard line against the protesters, blaming them for the violence.
"The events were violent, sometimes bloody, and caused the death of civilians and wounded several members of the security forces," he said. "The events were the work of masked gangs that attacked at night government buildings and even civilians inside their homes in a terrorist act that cannot be overlooked."
Few bought Ben Ali's rhetoric. Security forces continued to be deployed in full force across the country. One local trade union source said that "the Tunisian authorities decisively deployed troops that were stationed in front of a number of government organization in the town of Thela" after a gathering by protesters and a strike by teachers to protest the shootings.
In response to huge rallies by college and high school students around the country, Ben Ali's education minister took the extraordinary step of cancelling all classes and closing all campuses, according to the country's official TAP news agency.
The government says only 14 people have been killed in weeks of violence across the country..
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/baby...ises-jobs.html
Looks like the protests are working
CLASSWAR: ILC Urgent Communiqué on Uprising in Tunisia -- January 13, 2010
FYI: In case people are not getting even a taste of truth thru the
'usual channels' (I do not generally pass along this stuff because I
do not support groups whose strategy is reform of the present
'business union' setup in the Western imperialist World).
This crisis WILL be visited upon all the rest of us, soon enuff. So
pay attention to what's going on in the Maghreb.
-- grok.
----- Forwarded message from ILC <[email protected]> -----
From: ILC <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2011 08:27:56 -0800
Subject: ILC Urgent
Communiqué on Uprising in Tunisia -- January 13, 2010
To: Recipient List Suppressed: ;
Message-Id: <[email protected][192.168.2.100]>
INTERNATIONAL LIAISON COMMITTEE
P.O. Box 40009, San Francisco, CA 94140
Tel. (415) 641-8616; fax: (415) 626-1217
email: [email protected]
website: www.owcinfo.org
PLEASE EXCUSE DUPLICATE POSTINGS
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International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples
Urgent Communiqué
January 13, 2011
The International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples (ILC) condemns
the repression against the youth, workers and people of Tunisia, who have
risen up against oppression, the high cost of living, and corruption.
The ILC sends its support to the workers, youth and people of Tunisia and
their organizations, particularly the General Union of Tunisian Workers
(UGTT), which has spearheaded the mobilization.
The ILC calls on the labor movement and workers' organizations worldwide to
express their solidarity with the workers, youth and people of Tunisia, and
to demand an end to the brutal repression.
The bloody and corrupt regime of dictator Ben Ali, supported by the
European Union and the IMF, has faithfully applied their plans and dictates
in the context of the Association with the European Union, to be completed
in 2011, which aims to make Tunisia a "free trade" zone.
Immersed in misery, without any perspective, the youth and working class of
Tunisia, reclaiming their unions for struggle, are rising up across the
country to defend their very right to exist.
During several days, union activists of the UGTT have been killed under the
bullets of police repression. Men and women united, workers, youth,
lawyers, artists, academics ... hundreds have been injured, beaten, jailed.
Spontaneously in dozens of cities, the population went to the local
headquarters of the UGTT to express their opposition to Ben Ali. For the
first time in 25 years, one can hear the chants in the Tunisian
demonstrations of "Down with Ben Ali!"
The police repression has been systematic. At Kasserin and Thala dozens of
people have been killed. Police snipers have sown panic in the
demonstrations.
In Tunis, trade unionists were reading to leave their union's headquarters
to take to the streets, but they were soon driven back by police tear gas.
On Sunday, January 9, the UGTT local affiliate in Sfax issued a call for a
regional general strike. With only a few exceptions (hospitals and many
bakeries), the strike was followed 100%. In Sfax, 30,000 workers and youths
demonstrated in the streets. A Jenduba on January 12, there were 12,000
people demonstrating in a city of 30,000 inhabitants.
The mobilizations are sweeping every corner of the country, including the
suburbs of Tunis itself. In several cities the police were forced to
retreat or withdraw in the face of the relentless population. The curfew in
the greater Tunis metropolitan area has been largely ignored as the
protests continue to swell.
In the south, particularly in Kasserin, hundreds demonstrated,
appropriating the city buses to travel to Thala, where they violated the
22-out-of-24 hour curfew and forced the police to withdraw back to their
stations.
The government-run television channel, a mouthpiece for the propaganda of
General Ben Ali, filmed scenes of looting, staged by the police in
civilian clothing who infiltrated the demonstrations, to justify the
repression.
But in Thala, Kasserin and Sidi Bouzid, the youth set up Neighborhood
Committees to organize their marches and expel the provocateurs from their
mass protests.
Last week, on several occasions members of the military brandished their
weapons against the Public Order Brigades after the people took refuge
behind these brigades. The movement is so deep it has caused the dismissal
of the General Staff of the Army.
At the time of this writing, very violent clashes are taking place between
the police and the army, on one side, against tens of thousands of
demonstrators in Nabeul, Tunis, and Sfax and other cities and towns.
The International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples calls on
workers' organizations the world over to express their solidarity with the
workers and people of Tunisia, and in particular with the UGTT trade union
federation.
- For an immediate halt to the repression against the workers, people and
youth of Tunisia;
- Respect democratic freedoms in Tunisia;
- Meet the just social and political demands of the Tunisian workers and
people;
- For an immediate lifting of the siege of the UGTT headquarters in Tunis!
Algiers - Paris,
January 13, 2011, 4:10 p.m.
signed/
- Louisa Hanoune, General Secretary of the Workers Party of Algeria
- Daniel Gluckstein, National secretary of the Independent Workers' Party (POI)
Coordinators of the International Liaison Committee of Workers and Peoples
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The Financiers & Banksters have looted untold trillions of our future earnings.
Their bureaucratic police & military goons are here to make us all pay for it.
Forever.
Well FORGET THAT. Let's get it *ALL* back from them -- and more.
**Socialist revolution NOW!!**
Build the North America-wide General Strike.
TODO el poder a los consejos y las comunas.
TOUT le pouvoir aux conseils et communes.
ALL power to the councils and communes.
And beware the 'bait & switch' fraud: "Social Justice" is NOT *Socialism*...
It is BBC report, so don't expect the focus on the (possible) role of the Left here, but still:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12195025Originally Posted by BBC News
[FONT="Fixedsys"]History is not like some individual person which uses men to achieve its ends. History is nothing but the actions of men in pursuit of their ends. - Karl Marx.
Only sound common sense, respectable fellow that he is in the homely realm of his own four walls, has very wonderful adventures directly he ventures out into the wide world of research. - Friedrich Engels.
I am by heritage a Jew, by citizenship a Swiss, and by makeup a human being, and only a human being, without any special attachment to any state or national entity whatsoever. - Albert Einstein.[/FONT]