Massacre of Civilians in Tunisia
January 11th, 2011Via: AFP:
Anger over a crackdown on protesters in Tunisia grew Tuesday as a union official said 50 were killed in three days of unrest while artists and hospital staff joined demonstrations.
Locals reported looting in the town of Kasserine overnight and said demonstrators were fired upon from rooftops.
Meanwhile schools and universities across the country were shut as the government tried to quell weeks of protests centred on unemployment.
A union official told AFP that at least 50 people were killed over three days in Kasserine, one of three remote, farming areas with high rates of youth unemployment that have seen the worst of the violence.
“The number killed has passed 50,” said Sadok Mahmoudi from the regional branch of the Tunisian General Union of Labour (UGTT), citing tolls issued by medical staff in the regional hospital.
The Paris-based International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) said at least 35 people were killed in the weekend unrest.
“We have a list of the names of the 35,” FIDH president Souhayr Belhassen told AFP. “The total figure is higher. It’s somewhere around 50, but that’s an estimate.”
Due to our constant and unrelenting winter weather, I’ve turned on the TV tonight- which is running off of a rooftop antenae which my father installed many, many years ago. I was suprised to see that I can watch an Al Jazeera news station!They said tonight that the riots in Tunisia were over unemployment and Food Shortages!
When I see these things Kevin, I am fondly reminded of your mantra for many years now: food, water, and shelter. Thank you.
I’m thinking this will be the weirdest year ever in my 40 or so years of being a gardener. Was once a hobby, but now I know an absolute necessity. Am thinking heat wires under the soil, extreme row covers, etc. But that’s just me thinking, thinking, thinking.