Police
in Tunis used tear gas to try to disperse hundreds of muslim
extremists who were attacking them with stones, knives and
batons.
The Islamists were protesting a decision to broadcast
animated film Persepolis which they said denigrated
Islam. They were also protesting against a ban on women who wear
the niqab, or full-face veil, enrolling in university.
This was the biggest clashes over religion in the Tunisian
capital for several years.
Update: TV Channel Chief Firebombed
15th October 2011. See article
from telegraph.co.uk
Tunisian extremists have firebombed the home of a TV station
chief. About a hundred men, some of whom threw Molotov
cocktails, lay siege to the home of Nabil Karoui, the head of
the private television station Nessma late on Friday, the
station reported in its evening news bulletin.
Sofiane Ben Hmida, one of Nessma's star reporters, told AFP
the station chief was not at home when the attack on his house
took place. But his wife and children were. About 20 of the
protesters had managed to get inside. The family managed to get
out the back and are safe. The attackers wrecked the house and
set it on fire.
Interior ministry spokesman Hichem Meddeb told AFP around a
hundred people had turned up outside the house, forced their way
inside, broken the windows and torn out two gas pipes. Five
people had been arrested, he added.
This was the most serious incident yet in an escalating
series of protests against the station's broadcast of
Persepolis on October 7. The globally acclaimed animated
film on Iran's 1979 revolution 'offended' many Muslims because
it depicts an image of God as an old, bearded man.
Earlier on Friday, police fired tear gas at demonstrators as
some of the protests against the station degenerated. The main
demonstration began peacefully at a central Tunis mosque after
Friday prayers, with men and women chanting slogans against
Nessma. Thousands of people, many of them Salafist Muslims, were
present.
Karoui has already apologised for having broadcast the
film.
Update: 3000 Protest in defence of
freedom of expression
17th October 2011. See article
from monstersandcritics.com
Around
3,000 people peacefully demonstrated in the capital of Tunisia
Sunday in defence of freedom of expression, two days after a
violent protest against the broadcast of an animated and
supposedly blasphemous film Persepolis.
The demonstration was meant as a riposte after the violent
protests that followed the broadcast last week by Nessma TV, a
private channel, of the film about the aftermath of the 1979
Iranian revolution.
The film by French-Iranian director Marjane Satrapi, based on
the autobiographical graphic novels of the same name, show the
author as a young girl chafing under the clampdown on civil
liberties and discussing her frustrations with God.
We're demonstrating against extremism, for freedom of
expression, including artistic freedom, Semia Mahfoudh, a
high school teacher, who attended Sunday's demonstration, told
dpa. She said she feared that if Ennahda came to power,
Tunisia's tradition of secularism and commitment to gender
equality would be jeopardized.