‘The country is being suffocated,’ say Tunisians weary of food shortages
by Simon Speakman Cordall in Tunis from on (#63PYT)
Rationing and empty shelves have become commonplace as the government struggles to pay salaries and food subsidies
Assaad sits outside his cafe in central Tunis, heavy metal shutters locked behind him. There is no sugar, he says, and he cannot operate without it. Sugar, like coffee and countless other subsidised staples for Tunisians, is in very short supply.
Rationing has become commonplace, while supermarkets and small local shops have yawning gaps on shelves once crowded with everyday products. Government announcements on the food shortages have been confusing, attributing the absence of basic foodstuffs both to speculators and selfish hoarders.
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