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Battle of the Mighty

 

Tens of Thousands March against Tunisia Gov’t

Tens of Thousands March against Tunisia Gov’t
folder_openTunisia access_time11 years ago
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Local Editor

Tens of thousands of people poured onto the streets of the Tunisian capital to demand the resignation of the government as the political crisis in the north African nation deepened.


Tens of Thousands March against Tunisia Gov’tThe country has been wracked by political unrest since the July 25 murder of opposition lawmaker Mohamed Ibrahmi and Tuesday's protests marked the biggest anti-government demonstration since the assassination.

A police official estimated that 40,000 people crowded the streets of Tunis to call for the government led an-Nahda to step down. Opposition leaders cited in local media put the figure at 100,000-200,000.

Earlier on Tuesday, the National Constituent Assembly [ANC] - a body elected in 2011 to forge consensus on drafting a new constitution - was suspended.
Ibrahmi's murder, as well as that of another opposition politician, Chokri Belaid, have been blamed on an-Nahda-led cabinet, criticized for not doing enough to prevent them.
The demonstration attracted a mixed bag of opposition parties, ranging from extreme left to center-right, and was timed to mark six months since Belaid was gunned down outside his home.

Protesters carried pictures of both Belaid and Brahmi and shouted slogans such as "The people want the regime to fall" and "The government will end today".
The march passed off peacefully.
Assembly speaker Mustapha Ben Jaafar said the ANC's work would be halted until the government and opposition opened negotiations to break the deadlock "in the service of Tunisia".
Ibrahmi's killing had already prompted several opposition members to boycott the ANC and its suspension was a key demand of the protesters on the street.

The stalemate showed no sign of ending, however, with the opposition refusing to hold talks with the government until it steps down and an-Nahda ruling out any dialogue conditional on its ouster.
Larayedh has refused to quit, offering instead to broaden the coalition.
Ben Jaafar criticized the country's politicians for failing to find a compromise as Tunisia also battles mounting terror threats.
"Despite the gravity of the situation and instead of working towards unity, unfortunately party leaders have gone in the opposite direction, towards division, by mobilizing" street protests, he said.

An-Nahda chief Rached Ghannouchi, quoted in La Presse newspaper on Tuesday, said the government will not step down under pressure from the street, while Larayedh charged that demonstrators were hampering efforts by security forces to root out gunmen linked to al-Qaeda.
"There are excessive demands at protests for the dissolution of the elected government," Ghannouchi told La Presse.
"In democratic regimes, protests don't change governments. It's under dictatorial regimes that a demonstration is able to topple a regime."
Earlier Tuesday, before its work was suspended, the ANC had gathered to discuss the "terrorist crisis" as security forces pressed on with a vast operation to hunt down militants holed up in the rugged Mount Chaambi region near the Algerian border.

Speaking to the assembly, Larayedh had harsh words for the demonstrators, saying their activities meant security forces "are obliged to be in the streets when they should be participating in the battle against terrorism."

Defense Minister Rachid Sabbagh told the ANC that the armies of Tunisia and Algeria would "reinforce their cooperation, particularly to arrest the Chaambi terrorists.""We will continue our operations until all the terrorists have been killed or arrested," said the minister.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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