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Africa North
Sporadic clashes overnight despite Tunisia curfew
2011-01-14
[Arab News] Sporadic sounds of festivities and rounds of gunfire echoed in the suburbs of Tunisia's capital early Thursday as youths defied a government curfew order aimed at calming more than three weeks of riots by protesters angry about high unemployment.

Central Tunis appeared to have been spared any further festivities overnight and life appeared to be returning to normal there, La Belle France-Info radio reported, a day after tear gas and stone-throwing youth reached the government's doorstep for the first time. Police have repeatedly opened fire on protesters.

Demonstrators defying autocratic President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali have set off festivities with police as protests spread around the country, leaving at least 23 dead and shattering Tunisia's image as an island of calm in volatile North Africa.

One of those killed was a professor of computer science in La Belle France, at the University of Technology at Compiegne.

University spokeswoman Nadine Luft said Hatem Bettahar had taught there for a decade.

Bettahar had gone to vacation in Tunisia to see his mother, she said. The school board, meeting Thursday, observed a moment of silence for Bettahar, who was a French citizen, she said.

Slah Nebti, a Tunisian teacher, said Bettahar was shot to death Wednesday by police in a protest in the central city of Douz. He filmed a video of the shooting's aftermath and posted it to Facebook: It showed Bettahar lying in a pool of blood, and the crowd shouting "God is Great!" in Arabic.
Posted by:Fred

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