In post-revolutionary Tunisia, 'it's (still) the economy, stupid.'
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| Siliana, Tunisia
On Friday morning the people of Siliana carried their governor out of town in effigy 鈥撎齬epresented by a coffin marked 鈥済overnor鈥 鈥撎齱hich they pitched down an embankment to jeers and celebration.
They were marching in their thousands under a bright blue sky, moving symbolically toward Tunis, the capital. It was a welcome change from days of stones and tear-gas as protestors had fought with police over economic malaise they blame on state neglect.
The implications of last week鈥檚 violence in Siliana, a small country town, reach the heart of Tunisia鈥檚 democratic transition. Handling a stricken economy 鈥撎齛nd the anger it breeds 鈥撎齢as become the foremost test to date for the country鈥檚 first freely elected government, a coalition of long-time opposition parties unexpectedly lifted to power last year by the Arab Spring.
鈥淩emember, we made revolution for work, dignity, and freedom,鈥 said Abderrahman El Heni, a retired school administrator who joined the march. 鈥淣ow we can talk freely 鈥撎齜ut as for dignity, there are still no jobs.鈥
Post-revolution economic trouble has become something of an Arab Spring theme since last year, with new leaders in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya scrambling variously to woo jittery foreign investors, secure international loans, and keep a lid on high youth unemployment.
Tunisia's economic woes
In Tunisia, creating jobs is no easy task. Tunisia鈥檚 economy has suffered a double-whammy since former president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was toppled last year, with tourism and foreign investment dented both by the turmoil of revolution and crisis in eurozone countries that are Tunisia鈥檚 main trading partners.
With the downturn, the country's once steadily-growing real GDP turned negative, declining 1.8 percent last year.听While growth this year is expected to pick up, government plans to spend big on job creation still depend on foreign help. Loans of $500 million each from the World Bank and African Development Bank announced last week are the latest examples.
For now, economic trouble has kept unemployment high at 17 percent, only a slight improvement from last year's 19 percent and a figure that gets higher among young people and in depressed towns such as Siliana.听
The town lies in farming country around 70 miles southwest of Tunis, where the land tilts upward toward mountains running from Morocco to Tunisia.
The relative wealth of Tunisia鈥檚 bustling coastal cities contrasts with lethargy in the interior. It was in a similar inland town, Sidi Bouzid, that protests in December 2010 over unemployment and state corruption swelled into the uprising that unseated Mr. Ben Ali a month later.
How the unrest began听
The recent trouble in Siliana erupted last Tuesday when local union leaders called a general strike while residents demonstrated to demand jobs and the removal of governor Ahmed Mahoubi, a member of the ruling Ennahda party, whom many slam as aloof and neglectful.
Rallies spiraled into street brawls between protestors and police, who fired tear gas and birdshot 鈥撎齝anisters of lead or rubber pellets 鈥撎齛s young men threw stones and blocked streets with burning debris.
Violence peaked on Wednesday, as Siliana鈥檚 main hospital admitted nearly two hundred injured people, most struck by birdshot, said regional hospital director Abdelhak Atyaoui. Twenty people hit by birdshot in the eyes 鈥 potentially causing blindness 鈥 were transferred to Tunis hospitals.
After that, police apparently stopped using birdshot. The tactic has angered many and prompted the UN鈥檚 top human rights official, Navi Pillay, to condemn what she called excessive use of force. Authorities say dozens of security force members have also been injured in the clashes.
On Thursday Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali, from the Ennahda party, rejected calls from protestors and some left-leaning politicians to step down, accusing opposition parties of stirring up trouble in Siliana, Reuters reported.
Having swept elections last year, the moderate Islamist Ennahda party is increasingly being challenged over both its religious inclinations and managerial competence from broadly secularist opposition parties ahead of fresh elections slated for some time next year.
Political fallout
Anger and politics could ultimately intersect in towns like Siliana. While Ennahda won Siliana鈥檚 voting district in last year鈥檚 elections, at least some here now say they won鈥檛 be voting for the party again.
鈥淲e hoped they would solve our problems, but they鈥檝e done nothing,鈥 said Saber Amar, a young plumber who voted for Ennahda last year, cruising at the head of Friday鈥檚 protest march on a silver Yamaha scooter.
For many in Siliana, Tunisia鈥檚 government appears to be prolonging a decades-old pattern of neglect. Memories remain of protests in Siliana in 1990 over economic issues that ended with Ben Ali鈥檚 regime jailing protestors.
鈥淢y father was in jail for seven years,鈥 said Ramy Jlasi, laid off last June from his job cleaning car parts at a Tunis plant, as he marched down the road. 鈥淗e was in the same movement that I鈥檓 in now 鈥撎齠or employment,鈥 Mr. Jlasi says.
Today, much anger targets Mr. Mahoubi, Siliana鈥檚 regional governor. According to Najib Sebti, who heads the local chapter of the General Union of Tunisian Workers, Tunisia鈥檚 main trade union, Mahoubi has refused to discuss development with union leaders since his appointment last spring.
Local authorities could not be reached for comment. On Saturday the governor鈥檚 office, its gate festooned with barbed wire, appeared deserted and bore signs of violence including debris of stones. Tunisian Army soldiers standing guard by the door said no officials were present.
Violence scaring off investors?
Some protestors in Siliana liken the past week鈥檚 clashes to a revolution of sorts. On Friday afternoon, skirmishing broke out again by the police compound.
鈥淪iliana is our city and we must defend it,鈥 said Hamza, a 17 year-old student, taking a breather down a side-street with a purloined riot policeman鈥檚 shield. Like many, he says police involved in clashes were reinforcements brought from out of town.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have employment here, but at least now I can work with this,鈥 Hamza said, motioning with the shield as he darted back to the fray. Nearby, three young men were crouched behind a wall with Molotov cocktails they said were for use 鈥渙nly if the police fire birdshot again.鈥
An older generation, however, looks on the violence with deep concern.
鈥淲ho will ever want to invest in Siliana when they see chaos like this?鈥 said Abdelouahad Saddik, a day laborer and father of four, watching Friday鈥檚 clashes from a rooftop. 鈥淚 want peace and a job, not this.鈥
Fighting ceased as Tunisian Army soldiers secured government offices and police withdrew. Townspeople poured into the streets in jubilation - abruptly cut short when several dozen protestors resumed lobbing stones at the police compound.
Yesterday, as clashes continued, the government said it was transferring administration of the Siliana region to its deputy governor pending a final decision on resolving trouble there, said Tunisia鈥檚 state news agency, TAP.
For some in Siliana, even that may not inspire hope.
鈥淲orking in Tunisia is very hard,鈥 said Radhi, an unemployed graduate. It was Friday night and security forces were patrolling outside his house in armored vehicles, firing machine-gun bursts into the air.
In the street, he had joined in throwing stones. But at home he keeps an acceptance letter from a Ukrainian university.
鈥淢aybe I can find a job in Europe,鈥 he says.