President Beji Caid Essebsi yesterday warned that Tunisia could fall prey to Islamic State group militants in neighbouring Libya profiting from the instability.
The violent demonstrations over unemployment opened a new front of concern for Tunisia, already struggling from a foundering economy and the threat of terrorism after three major attacks last year.
The week of increasingly violent demonstrations was triggered Sunday when a young man who was turned down for a government job climbed a transmission tower in protest and was electrocuted.
"We will get out of this ordeal," the president said in his first address to the nation since the crisis erupted. He pressed the government to put in place a program to address unemployment. About one in three young people remains without work.
A curfew from 8PM until 5AM (local time) was declared because the attacks on public and private property "represent a danger to the country and its citizens," the Interior Ministry said. Weekend sports events were canceled.
A tense calm reigned.
The unrest began Sunday in the town of Kasserine in central Tunisia where the young man electrocuted himself not far from the town of Sidi Bouzid where a vegetable seller set himself afire in 2011, triggering Tunisia's revolution.
