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Tunisia top cleric’s call to end strikes stirs outrage

By AFP - Sep 29,2016 - Last updated at Sep 29,2016

TUNIS — An appeal from Tunisia’s highest religious authority for workers to end strikes and protests and save the country’s ailing economy stirred outrage on Tuesday.

Grand Mufti Othman Battikh on Monday called on Tunisians to “dedicate all their efforts to working and studying” and to “abandon untimely protests and sit-ins hindering work and production”.

His remarks came after Tunisia said on Friday that British energy firm Petrofac was to resume operations at a gas plant in the country after a labour dispute was resolved that had halted work for months.

Authorities have struggled to redress Tunisia’s economy and solve youth unemployment — particularly among new graduates — since the 2011 revolt that toppled longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

The powerful UGTT labour union said it was surprised by the cleric’s labelling the “legitimate demands” of workers as “haram” or “halal”, meaning forbidden or permissible in Islam.

The Tunisian Forum for Economic and Political Rights, an NGO, criticised the mufti’s “interference” and called on the presidency to “assume its responsibilities in defending the constitution, which guarantees... civil and political liberties”.

Tunisians on social media asked why the mufti had not condemned widespread corruption as “haram” instead.

Prime Minister Youssef Chahed, who took office last month, has said he was “determined to face all illegal and illegitimate sit-ins, while remaining committed to guaranteeing the right to strike”.

The government announced on Wednesday that Petrofac was halting operations at the Cherqui plant off the southeastern islands of Kerkennah because of protests by Tunisian workers.

But since the labour dispute was resolved, the plant is again operating at 90 per cent of its capacity, Social Affairs Minister Mohamed Trabelsi said on Tuesday.

Tunisia is to host an international conference on foreign investments at the end of November.

 

A wave of extremist attacks, including two last year that killed dozens of foreign tourists, has further exacerbated problems in the economy, which relies heavily on tourism revenues.

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