Violent unrest breaks out in Tunisian capital

TUNIS, (Reuters) – Police fired into the air to disperse a crowd ransacking buildings in a Tunis suburb yesterday, the first time a wave of violent unrest that officials  say has killed 23 civilians has hit the capital.

People taking part in the weeks of clashes rocking Tunisia  say they want jobs and better living conditions, but the  authorities say the protests have been hijacked by a minority of  violent extremists armed with petrol bombs and clubs.

In the strongest U.S. statement on the violence to date,  State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Washington was  “deeply concerned by reports of the use of excessive force by  the government of Tunisia”.

A Reuters reporter in the working-class Ettadamen  neighbourhood of Tunis said he saw hundreds of youths, who had  earlier blocked roads with burning tyres and hurled stones at  police, try to attack a local government building.

Police fired warning shots into the air and also fired  teargas grenades to try to force people back from the building,  the reporter said.

“We are not afraid, we are not afraid, we are afraid only of  God,” the crowds chanted.
The main body of the crowd later dispersed and police were  pursuing small groups of people through side streets near the  scene of the earlier stand-off.

A witness reported that large numbers of police  reinforcements had been brought in and were being kept on  standby a few blocks away. There was no sign of any disturbances  in other parts of the city.

The unrest is the worst in decades. Officials said the  civilian deaths — almost all of them in clashes in provincial  towns at the weekend — came about when police fired on rioters  in legitimate self-defence.

Reports of the clashes in Tunis emerged minutes after the  government raised the death toll from the unrest by three, but  dismissed human rights groups’ estimates of a higher number.

Until last evening there had been no reports of major new  clashes after the army was deployed in the most restive towns,  schools and universities were shut indefinitely and police with  loudhailers ordered people in at least one town not to gather in  the streets.

Tunisia — a country of 10 million people which depends on  trade and tourism for its economic survival — has been bracing  for international reaction to its handling of the protests.

But former colonial ruler France, which still carries  influence in the north African country, responded to the unrest  without apportioning blame for the deaths.

Tunisian Communications Minister Samir Labidi told a news  conference that the death toll from clashes in the past few days  was 21 — three more than previously announced.

An additional two people were killed in clashes earlier in  the unrest, which has now been under way for almost a month. A  further two committed suicide in acts of protest.

“All other figures given by television and agencies which  talk about 40 or 50 (dead) are totally false,” Labidi said.

“Religious extremist movements and extremist movements from  the left have infiltrated these protests and pushed for  violence,” he said.