A Tunisian trade union on Sunday called an end to a general strike that triggered five days of violence fuelled by disappointment nearly two years after the country’s revolution.
A Tunisian trade union on Sunday called an end to a general strike that triggered five days of violence fuelled by disappointment nearly two years after the country's revolution.
"We decided to suspend the general strike," Ahmed Chefai of the UGTT union's executive board for the town of Siliana told a crowd of around 100 people.
He did not specify for how long the suspension would last but said they were waiting for the implementation of a deal negotiated on Saturday with the government dominated by the Islamist party Ennhada.
The agreement provides for sidelining Governor Ahmed Ezzine Mahjoubi, a speedy review by the courts of those imprisoned in April 2011, funds to care for the wounded and a development program which must still be clarified.
More than 300 people have been injured in five days of violence in Siliana after mounting clashes, strikes and attacks by salafists across Tunisia that have plunged the country into a political impasse.
The violence also came ahead of the second anniversary of the revolution, triggered on December 17, 2010 when a young fruit and vegetable seller set himself alight in the town of Sidi Bouzid to protest against police harassment.
Protesters in Siliana have been demanding the governor's resignation, financial aid and the withdrawal of police from the town, blaming it for the violence this week.
Meanwhile calm prevailed on Sunday in Siliana, southwest of Tunisia, and in neighboring regions where clashes on Saturday night pitted police and protesters.