Shutting up shop: Libyan conflict squeezes southern Tunisia

In This Article:

* Impoverished southern Tunisia depends on trade with Libya

* Fighting between rival Libyan groups is killing off trade

* Protests in one Tunisian town last year when border was closed

By Ulf Laessing

BEN GUERDANE, Tunisia, June 10 (Reuters) - Standing in his one-room store between tables stacked with brightly coloured t-shirts and jeans, Fathi Mars gestures in despair.

“If the war continues we will shut down,” said the shopkeeper.

It’s a common refrain in Ben Guerdane. The town in Tunisia’s impoverished south has for decades served as an entrepot for goods, smuggled or imported, 35km across the border from Libya.

Since the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, however, conflict in the neighbouring country has decimated business.

Around 700 stores have closed in the past eight years as supplies dwindled and prices soared, according to a local traders' association. The stalls' skeletal remains pockmark the town's streets -- rusting and buckled metal frames once heaving with goods for sale.

The financial fallout from Libya's war is another blow for Tunisia. The North African country helped inspire the broader Arab Spring uprisings with its overthrow of autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011. But while Tunisians now have democracy, financially they are struggling.

The Tunisian economy shrank 13 percent between 2017 and 2011, according to World Bank data, and youth unemployment, which helped drive the revolution, is still among the highest in the region at around 35 percent.

Austerity measures, high inflation and the impact on tourism and foreign investment from periodic attacks by Islamist militants have taken a heavy toll, prompting protests in April in the central town of Sidi Bouzid, where the 2011 revolution started.

Libya used to act as a pressure valve for the Tunisian economy, a place where thousands of Tunisians went for work each year and a source of cheap goods they could sell back home. But the violence has damaged the flow of products and people.

LOCAL GRIEVANCES

Ben Guerdane’s so-called ‘Souk Libya’ – a labyrinth of low-slung stores selling clothes, televisions and microwaves, some still in boxes with the names of Libyan import firms -- has been under pressure for years. Its problems deepened after Khalifa Haftar, the commander of Eastern Libya forces, began an offensive in early April to take Tripoli from soldiers loyal to the internationally-recognised government.

The fighting nixed a trade deal between Tunisia and Libya which would have allowed travellers to import consumer goods worth 10,000 Libyan dinars ($7,140) to Tunisia, reversing the limits and arbitrary bans previously put on imports by armed groups and officials representing the Libyan state, traders and officials in Ben Guerdane said.