Tunisia arrests bakery union chief amid bread shortage

Privately-owned bakeries went on strike on August 7 and demanded concessions from the commerce ministry. (File/AFP)
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Updated 17 August 2023
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Tunisia arrests bakery union chief amid bread shortage

  • The government in August banned some 1,500 privately-owned bakeries from purchasing subsidised flour

TUNIS: Tunisian authorities have arrested the head of the national bakery owners’ union, accusing him of a “monopoly” as the country faces a weeks-long shortage of subsidised bread, local media reported Thursday.
The government in August banned some 1,500 privately-owned bakeries that produce European-style breads and pastries from purchasing subsidised flour, ending a practice that had lasted for more than a decade.
Subsidies remain in place for 3,737 bakeries of another network selling bread at a government-sanctioned price, unchanged since 1984.
Bakeries’ union chief Mohamed Bouanane was arrested on Wednesday “on suspicion of monopoly and speculation with subsidised foodstuffs” and of money laundering, news outlets in the North African country reported.
The privately-owned bakeries went on strike on August 7 and demanded concessions from the commerce ministry, arguing the end of subsidies would force some of them to close.
President Kais Saied, who has assumed near total governing powers since he took office in 2021, dismissed earlier this week the head of the Tunisian cereals authority.
Economists told AFP the current supply crisis stems from an inadequate reserve of subsidised flour held by the highly-indebted Tunisian government, which centralizes all purchases of basic goods.
Tunisians who largely supported Saied’s takeover have become increasingly fed up with rising inflation and poverty, which now affects some 20 percent of the country’s 12 million inhabitants, according to the government.
Bread riots in Tunisia in 1983-1984 cost more than 150 lives.


Israeli president tells Bild: War with Iran needs ‘end result’, not exact timetable

Updated 11 sec ago
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Israeli president tells Bild: War with Iran needs ‘end result’, not exact timetable

  • Herzog said the US and Israeli attacks on Iran were changing the whole configuration of the Middle East
  • He defended strikes on Iranian oil sites ⁠as a way ⁠of taking away money from Tehran’s “war machine“

JERUSALEM: Israel’s President Isaac Herzog on Tuesday did not offer a timetable on when the war with Iran could end, telling Germany’s Bild newspaper: “We need to take a deep breath and get to the end result.”
Herzog said the US and Israeli attacks on Iran were changing the whole configuration of the Middle East. He defended strikes on Iranian oil sites ⁠as a way ⁠of taking away money from Tehran’s “war machine.”
The interview was published as the US and Israel pounded Iran with what the Pentagon and Iranians on the ground said were the most ⁠intense airstrikes of the war, despite global markets betting that President Donald Trump will seek to end the conflict soon.
Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Saar, had earlier said his country was not planning for an endless war and was consulting with Washington about when to stop it.
“The Iranians are the ones spreading chaos ⁠and ⁠terror throughout the region and the world. So I think if we measure everything by a speedometer, we won’t get anywhere. We need to take a deep breath and get to the end result,” Herzog told Bild.
Eliminating the Iranian threat would “enable the entire system in the region to suddenly breathe again and develop further. That’s fantastic,” he added.