A worker pushes a cart of boxes past a Tunisian herbalist’s shop selling medicinal plants at Souk el-Blat, in the Medina of Tunisia’s capital Tunis, on March 14, 2020. PHOTO: FETHI BELAID / AFPThere is no known cure for the new coronavirus, but in the medicinal herbs souq in Tunis, anxious Tunisians are consulting with herbalists and stocking up on traditional remedies.
But in the heart of the old city, Tunisians continue flocking to the Souk el-Blat and its herbalist stalls, where flasks, powders, and dried herbs are stacked high. “I can understand people falling back on tradition,” said Hedi Oueslati, a pharmacologist and Tunisia’s director-general of health.He continued: “If we’re talking about a grandma’s remedy that is not dangerous and poses no problems, ok.”Some people were profiting from public anxiety to sell “concoctions” with unknown ingredients, he warned.“What can I take for coronavirus?” Hanen Oueslati asked a vendor at a stall selling fresh rosemary and oregano.
Fethi Ben Moussa, a 61-year-old herbalist, explained: “Tunisians love everything traditional and natural: in times of panic they trust in the remedies of our ancestors.
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