A group of
Tunisian prostitutes demanded Tuesday to be allowed back to work, 18 months
after their brothel in the resort town of Sousse was attacked by hardline
Salafists and closed down.
A
delegation handed deputy parliament speaker Meherzia Laabidi, a woman, a
petition signed by 120 prostitutes calling for their brothel in the popular
coastal resort to be allowed to reopen.
“We know
the state cannot help us financially, because the current economic situation is
so bad. That’s why we’re calling for the brothel to be reopened, so we don’t
have to ask for charity,” one of them, calling herself Souhir, told AFP by
phone.
Souhir said
that, in 2012, radical Islamists had attacked the building where she used to,
“looted everything they found there... and put us out of work.”
There are
numerous whorehouses in Tunisia, where prostitution is regulated by the state.
After the
uprising in January 2011, Islamist protesters demanded their closure, even
trying to set fire to buildings in the capital’s red light district.
Laabidi,
from the Islamist Ennahda party, confirmed to Mosaique FM that she had met the
women and agreed to forward their request to the relevant government
departments.
“I listened
to their demand and I will... write a letter as an MP to the secretary of state
for women and to the interior ministry, to see how we can preserve the dignity
of these Tunisian citizens” she said.
A short
video on the radio station’s website shows her talking to three women whose
faces are blurred.
“It’s not
an ordinary employment problem,” she told them, adding that “honestly, for me,
brothels are a part of the problem.”
The
prostitutes insisted their neighbours had no objection to their presence.
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