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Tunisia gas field protesters reach deal, production to restart

June 16, 2017 at 7:13 pm

Tunisians stage a protest demanding employment at an oil-well company in Tataouine, Tunisia on 3 April 2017 [Tasnim Nasri/Anadolu Agency]

Protesters blockading oil and gas fields in southern Tunisia have reached an agreement with the government to end a sit-in and allow production to restart immediately, the government and protesters said on Friday.

Protests over jobs in southern Tataouine and Kebili provinces hit oil and gas production in a region where French company Perenco and Austrian producer OMV operate. The deal calls for jobs in oil companies and development projects.

Labour Minister Imed Hammami told a press conference the agreement would allow production to restart immediately.

Read: Protests continue in Tataouine, Tunisia

“It is an agreement that addresses all our demands for the region and we will end the sit-in,” Tarek Haddad, one of the protest leaders at the Kamour site told Reuters.

The deal calls for 1,500 jobs in oil companies, a budget of 80 million dinars ($32.66 million) for a development fund and another 3,000 jobs in environmental projects.

Protesters were pressing demands for jobs and a share of the country’s energy wealth and forced the closure of two oil and gas pumping stations in Kamour in Tatatouine and in Kebili.

At Kamour, they had shut down the Vana pumping station, affecting around 40 percent of Tunisia’s energy production. Tunisia only produces around 44,000 barrels per day, but the protests hit foreign companies.

The closures were another challenge to Prime Minister Youssef Chahed’s government as it tries to push economic reforms and consolidate Tunisia’s democracy six years after a revolt ended the autocratic rule of Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali.