New clashes erupt in Tunisia protests

AFP , Sunday 27 Feb 2011

Security forces and anti-government protesters clashed in the Tunisian capital Sunday, with police firing tear gas and warning shots to disperse stone-throwing youths in a third day of violence

Security forces acted to stop protesters, who were chanting anti-government slogans, from reaching the interior ministry, AFP reporters said.
Rampaging youths hurled rocks at buildings to break the windows and threw up barricades to impede the police who were not able to disperse them with tear gas and warning shots.

Three people were killed when an anti-government protest in Tunis on Saturday turned violent as riot police and masked police in civilian clothes fired warning shots and tear gas at hundreds of protesters.

Protesters are demanding the removal from the interim government of members of the regime of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, whose toppling on January 14 after weeks of protests sparked similar uprising across the Arab world.

The interior ministry said the three who died on Saturday were among a dozen wounded, with several members of the security forces also hurt in the clashes.

More than 100 people were arrested for involvement in the unrest on Saturday and 88 people after a demonstration Friday, it said, blaming the violence on "agitators" it said had infiltrated peaceful demonstrators.

In the biggest of several rallies against the transitional authority, about 100,000 protesters marched down the capital's main avenue on Friday shouting slogans, including against Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi who was in Ben Ali's government.

Clashes left 21 police officers injured and three police stations damaged, the interior ministry said.

In response to the growing protests, the interim government announced Friday that it would hold elections by mid-July.

Ben Ali's fall after 23 years in power sparked similar uprisings against long-time rulers in the region, including one that led to the downfall of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak on February 11 and another under way in Libya.

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