BREAKING NEWS

Secular politician killed in southern Tunisia clashes

TUNIS - Clashes between Islamists and secular opponents in the southern Tunisian town of Tataouine on Thursday left a secular politician dead, a local official and resident said.
The violence broke out during a march organized by a group of Islamists close to the Ennahda party, which leads Tunisia's Islamist government. Protesters chanted slogans against the secular Nida Touns party, accusing it of being close to ousted leader Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, a resident said.
The Islamist group, the Association for the Protection of the Revolution, was passing the building of the local Agricultural Union which is headed by the local representative of Nida Touns, when the clashes began.
"The coordinator of Nida Touns in Tataouine, Lofi Nakd, was killed after he was attacked," Nida Touns official Khemais Ksila told Reuters by phone. A resident who gave his name as Samil Smida said knives and stones were used in the violence.
"The clashes broke out between Islamists and some people from Nida Touns," he said. "The Islamists were chanting slogans against Nida Touns, calling them liars, telling them to leave. Those inside reacted, throwing stones and it all began."
The state-run TAP news agency said nine people were injured.
Tunisia, where an uprising against secular strongman Ben Ali was the first of last year's "Arab Spring" revolts, is now ruled by an Islamist-led government that has promised not to impose strict religious rules and to respect women's rights. Liberals say Islamist policies threaten human rights in a country once seen as a beacon of Arab secularism.