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TUNIS: An employee serves pastry to a customer at a bakery in Tunis during Ramadan on March 29, 2024, amid a shortage of sugar supplies in the country. – AFP
TUNIS: An employee serves pastry to a customer at a bakery in Tunis during Ramadan on March 29, 2024, amid a shortage of sugar supplies in the country. – AFP
Sugar shortage darkens Tunisian Eid festivities
Soaring inflation denting Tunisians’ purchasing power

TUNIS: In downtown Tunis, dozens of customers stand in a long queue snaking out of a supermarket to buy sugar, essential for the end of Ramadan celebrations eight days away. The key ingredient for traditional sweets served to mark the end of the Muslim holy month is now being rationed to one to two kilograms per customer per week. “I never thought that one day we would form a queue in Tunisia to buy sugar,” said Lamia Bouraoui, 58. Like other basic foodstuffs in Tunisia, sugar is subsidized by the state.

But the dearth of funds in the North African country’s public coffers has made it and other culinary essentials like flour and semolina scarce since late 2022. For the Eid al-Fitr holiday marking the end of Ramadan, families throughout North Africa make copious amounts of sweets and pastries that often last for days.

Without enough sugar, “we are deprived this year of this pleasure,” added Bouraoui. Some, like Sami, 40, queue for sugar accompanied by family members to increase the rations his family can enjoy.

TUNIS: Employees make sweets at a bakery in Tunis during the holy fasting month of Ramadan amid a shortage of sugar supplies in the country. – AFP
TUNIS: Employees make sweets at a bakery in Tunis during the holy fasting month of Ramadan amid a shortage of sugar supplies in the country. – AFP

“One day we queue for flour, another for semolina and another for sugar,” he said. The shortage has also dealt a blow to bakeries. “We rely on sugar in everything we do,” Chokri Bouajila, a bakery worker in Tunis, told AFP. “If we have sugar, we can work, otherwise we can’t do anything.” Bouajila, who specializes in Tunisian traditional sweets, said customers have been buying less and less of his pastries.

Over the past few years, Tunisians have seen their purchasing power greatly diminish thanks to inflation, a recession and rising unemployment. The country of 12 million is grappling with debt worth about 80 percent of its entire economic output, and inflation averaging between eight to 10 percent a year. A third of its population is estimated to be living under the poverty line.

At the shopping centre, the queue only gets longer.

“I’ve been here for the past 35 minutes,” said 40-year-old Hassna, another customer waiting in line for sugar. “Why are we going through all this? How did we get here?” “Let us thank God”, a man standing nearby told her, “we are in a better situation than our brothers in Gaza who are dying of hunger”. Nonetheless, others hope to make the best of the country’s latest challenge. Nayla, a shopper making her way around the mall, said she would rather change her habits than get in line for sugar, pointing out that it was hardly the healthiest ingredient. “Bitter coffee doesn’t bother me anymore,” she said. –AFP

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