Tunisians protest over Sfax garbage crisis

Tunisians protest over Sfax garbage crisis
Tunisians protest over Sfax garbage crisis

Over 1,000 people demonstrated in Tunisia's second city Sfax amid an ongoing trash crisis exacerbated by a landfill fire polluting the city's air.

Rubbish has been piling up in the streets of Sfax for months, as available dump sites reach capacity with local residents forced to burn their own refuse.

Protestors, including refuse collectors, gathered in front of the provincial government headquarters chanting: "Sfax is forgotten, rubbish is eating it in every street".

They demanded the resignation of Sfax's governor Fakher Fakhfakh, who the previous day attempted to play down the dangers of a landfill fire near the city's port.

Social media users had posted images of thick smoke covering the port area, prompting Fakhfakh to call for Facebook to be shut down in Sfax and say that people had "false information that is harming the country's economy".

Sfax, a key economic hub with a million residents, has seen a string of protest movements since 2021 over trash in the streets and on pavements.

President Kais Saied, who froze parliament and seized near-total power in July 2021, has vowed to resolve the situation, but residents say little has changed.

On Wednesday, Saied ordered Environment Minister Leila Chikhaoui to "take immediate action" to solve the crisis.

Tunisia's household waste is mainly buried, either at official landfills or in fly-tips, and authorities are struggling to find new sites for the 2.6 million tonnes the country produces annually.