Tunisian teachers held a protest vigil on Tuesday demanding heightened security to protect educational establishments nationwide, after a petrol bomb was discovered in an institute this week. The explosive was found in a classroom at a secondary institute in the Beradaa area of Ksour Essef in the central governorate of Mahdia. According to a number of locals, the device consisted of a medium-sized drinks bottle connected to wires, placed near a light switch. Police inspected the area and made investigations before the device was taken to the relevant authorities in Tunis for analysis. Teachers meanwhile demanded an immediate intervention by the Ministry of Education, calling for an extended educational and administrative framework to tighten security and prevent outsiders from entering school premises. Tunisia is currently experiencing a nationwide security clampdown in search of al-Qaeda militants, drug dealers and arms smugglers. On Monday, police discovered another explosive device in a private prayer house attached to the Uqba ibn Nafi in Kairouan. The bomb consisted of a vehicle exhaust pipe, again connected with wires, fuel and an alarm clock timer. Tunisia\'s educational establishment meanwhile faces $400 million \"maintenance\" costs, after attacks on schools following the Arab Spring revolution in the country.
GMT 10:50 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
Saudi university to open driving school for womenGMT 12:10 2017 Monday ,24 July
Saudi university hospital unveils plan to structure health care costsGMT 11:30 2017 Saturday ,22 July
Saudi Arabia's KAUST ranked first among 50 leadingGMT 00:15 2017 Saturday ,22 April
A'Sharqiyah University organises voluntary activityGMT 02:54 2017 Friday ,21 April
Sultan Qaboos University teams pick top 4 honoursGMT 08:03 2017 Friday ,14 April
HRH Premier attends granddaughter's graduationGMT 04:27 2017 Thursday ,13 April
Caledonian College holds first forum for female engineers in OmanGMT 03:22 2017 Thursday ,13 April
Sultan Qaboos University workshop discusses policy dialogue on Bioethics issuesMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©