* Three dead, 12 wounded after clash
* Government blames Ben Ali loyalists
* Clash follows anti-government protests
(Adds PM's comment to Al Jazeera para 7-8)
TUNIS, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Three people were killed in clashes between Tunisian security forces and youths rioting in central Tunis on Saturday, an Interior Ministry official told Reuters.
The official, who declined to be named, said another 12 had been injured in the clashes, which he said occurred after a riot orchestrated by loyalists of ousted President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. He said about 100 people had been arrested.
"Those who were arrested have admitted they were pushed by former Ben Ali officials," he said. "Others said they were paid to do it." A Reuters witness had earlier seen Tunisian soldiers fire into the air and use tear gas in an effort to disperse dozens of youths, many carrying sticks, who were breaking shop windows near Tunis's Barcelona Station.
The North African state's crime rates have soared since a popular uprising toppled Ben Ali on Jan. 14, and security officials often say his supporters are trying to destabilise the country. The clash followed a large protest late on Friday against the make-up of the post-Ben Ali interim government. During that, security forces fired in the air to disperse protesters who burned tyres and threw rocks.
Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi told Al Jazeera television police seized a car and its driver with $60,000 in cash which he said was being distributed to thugs.
"We have been facing a lot of difficulties lately, as if there is a ploy to destabilise the interim government ... Next week will be decisive in bringing about a road map" for a transition to democratic government, he said.
"The Tunisian people will decide on what will be done". Critics of the interim government, which has promised to hold elections by mid-July, complain that it is too close to the old regime and has failed to provide adequate security. Tunisia's revolution inspired a similar revolt in Egypt and sparked protests elsewhere around the Arab world, including in neighbouring Libya.
(Reporting by Tarek Amara; Additional reporting by Omar Abdelaty in Cairo; Writing by Richard Valdmanis; editing by Jon Boyle
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