Thursday, 22 May 2014


‘Trash Selfies’ for a Clean Tunisia

A number of Tunisians have recently been taking selfies while posing near trash before publishing them on social-networking sites via the hash tag #SelfiePoubella (‘trash selfie') to denounce the piles of trash that fill the country's streets.
The move came in reaction to a number ofselfies and pictures posted on social media by the minister of tourism Amel Karboul to promote tourism to the northern-most African country.
selfies
On May 16, the admins of the Facebook page ‘Clean Tunisia’ urged [fr] users to upload their selfies:
We are waiting for your selfies to show the grave situation in our streets and everywhere in the country…They are seeking to hide the sad reality in our neighborhoods with postcards of the beautiful landscapes of Tunisia and forget that there are people living in trash…
selfie 3
In an another message posted [fr] on May 19, they said:
If [tourism minister] Karboul's selfies are generally justified by the good touristic cause, the campaign Selfie Poubella is of a touristic as well as a civic interest since it simply calls for clearing the cities of Tunisia of the garbage that litter its streets.
The principle is very simple with the aim that the Tunisian citizen as well as the tourist benefits from a clean public space.
Let's show this country's officials the real face of our streets and the pollution of the environment.
selfie 2
Last April, the government estimated the piles of trash accumulated in the streets at 300 thousand tons blaming “broken” trash collection equipment and an increase in the number of sick leaves taken by trash workers. Despite multiple cleanliness campaigns launched by the authorities and civil society groups in different regions of the country, trash continues to pile up.
selfie 1

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