Protests draw support from many sectors of civil society

Protests draw support from many sectors of civil society - trade unions, students, lawyers syndicates

Within days of Mohamed Bouazizi's attempted suicide in front of the local government office, students, teachers, lawyers, journalists, human rights activists, trade unionists, and opposition politicians took to the streets in several cities, including Tunis, to condemn the government's economic policies, its repression of all critics, and a mafia-style corruption that enriches members of the president's family.

Education unions, some of the most independent and aggressive within the UGTT, played a critical role in organizing unemployed workers, many with university degrees, who protested the government's failure to provide jobs, its corruption, and its refusal to engage in meaningful dialogue. Human rights organizations, journalists, lawyers, and opposition parties then joined in to criticize the government's restrictions on media coverage of the protests and the arrests and torture of demonstrators. In this way, a broad coalition of civil society organizations has connected bread-and-butter employment grievances with fundamental human rights and rule-of-law concerns.
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Tunisia
Recent events (Dec 2010 - Jan 2011)?
Protests draw support from many sectors of civil society
Concessions made by the Tunisian president?
Dec 17, 2010: University student commits suicide
Dec-Jan: Unemployed youths take to the streets - 66 people killed
Jan 06-13, 2011: More riots, repression
Jan 14, 2010: government dismissed and call for anticipated elections
Jan 14, 2011: Tunisia president declares state of emergency and leaves
Jan 17, 2010: Formation of an interim unity government
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