Tag Archives: tunisia

WHY A ZERO-SUM PROPOSITION?

 

Four weeks ago I stood in the middle of the Avenue Habib Bourguiba, Tunis’s Fifth Avenue. Suddenly I was I was surrounded by hundreds of people chanting and yelling. I had heard about demonstrations in various regions of the south, but so quickly in Tunis? I asked.

Without warning I was overwhelmed by a sense of exhilaration and déjà vu. It was in 1978 and 1979, back when ZABA was the National Director of Security. I was a young man attending University in Tunis. Most demonstrations were organized by the then powerful Union Generale des Etudiants Tunisiens (UGET), of which I was an active member. On one occasion I witnessed several students, and some laborers, machine-gunned by the police as they attempted to take down a statue of Bourguiba, the symbol of autocracy. I was shocked and in disbelief. It was not until about half an hour later that I realized I had a three inch deep gash on the left side of my belly. As I sought the nearest alley way and refuge away from the roaming BOB vans, I was encircled by several plain clothed policemen and taken to the ministry of Interior. It is there I met several other students, many badly beaten. I will spare you the details of my two week stay at the Interior Ministry. I try very hard to put it out of my mind, in the hope of rehabilitation and forgiveness.

Thirty years later, I find myself less than a hundred yards away from where I was first brutally beaten, and pain no longer mattered, and over eleven thousand nights of the same nightmare. I was surrounded by the same young innocent faces. The chants are the identical and the methods are indistinguishable, were it not the hundreds of portable telephones held up high. I became confused and felt a rush of blood to the head.

I was scheduled to leave for the US the next day to tend to my business. On the other hand, I wanted to see how far these demonstrations would go. I underestimated the power of these young men and women. They had the belief and desire we had thirty years before. They knew how to communicate through the use of technology. For I suppose, that ZABA and his entourage of mostly technology-challenged men like himself, also underestimated the advantages technology provided, when used properly. I go as far as claiming that the US government itself underestimated, mismanaged, and poorly strategized how to deal with social media and its proliferation within the masses. The Obama administration is still racing against the clock trying to figure out which horse to bet on, and how to best hedge its bets. If only it was not for Twitter and Facebook, they would deliberate and “monitor” the situation, as Secretary Clinton said weeks ago referring to the situation in Tunisia.

Later that evening at the neighborhood café, as some of the youth were showing off their trophies of emptied out tear-gas canisters that read “MADE IN THE USA”, I was often asked “why does Obama hate us…”, or “do they just mean democracy for the US only?” I only wish I had spent more time there explaining the position and the feeling of real American people.

On my flight back to the States the next day, I thought about those questions. I anticipated how it would be played out by all sides. I guessed, based on past history, that ZABA would justify his regime’s brutal force by claiming he was battling Islamist extremists, and I was proven right. That is a card he pulled every time he suspected his heavy-handed practices would be criticized by the world. And that is all Washington wanted and had to hear. Truth was irrelevant. This was a case of the end justifying the means, as long as the means meant stability in the region, because in this region, stability and democracy are mutually exclusive.

As someone who has recently spent considerable time in the MENA region, let me assure you that none of the men I spoke to cared about extremist views, political ideologies, Bin Laden, or Obama. In Tunisia, the street is unconcerned with geopolitical forces and Islamist views. Tunisia is a very secular country composed of an extremely well-educated young people. What they care about is jobs, dignity, freedom, and the opportunity to seek a better life. This is not an ideological uprising like China or Eastern Europe of 1989, or a religious one like Iran of 1979.

I call upon president Obama to support a genuine democracy, even at the expense of immediate American policy interests. If he chooses platitudes and the status quo, the harm to America’s standing in the region will likely take decades to repair. I have decided not to wait until a clear winner emerges. For me, there is only one party that deserves my support. For democracy and freedom is a right, not a privilege bestowed on those who only serve our national interest.

Mr. President, where is the “audacity” with which you had many of us believe you were the “change” force we were looking for? Where is the “Yes we can” you had sold us? I say to you, Sir, and on behalf of all Tunisians and Arab people, “together, we will”.

 

 

 

 

A CALL TO THE YOUNG PEOPLE OF TUNISIA

To my fellow members of the JDT, let us not become lackadaisical. Let us overcome, through dialogue, our ideological differences and unite as one. Our real job has just begun. Many of you marched and many of you have been beaten. The physical and emotional scars will be with you forever. I ask you, what was our main objective and why did so many of us get killed and injured? Was it simply to get rid of ZABA? Or was it to rid our country of the corruption, nepotism, and the muzzle we wore for so many years, no matter what name it Bore? If the answer is yes, then we should not rest for one moment. Ben Ali may have left, but all other fundamentals constituting autocracy, corruption, and lack of basic freedoms are still omnipresent. The players are different, but the game and their plan for us is the same.

One would only have to look at the initiatives being taken by the interim government to pursue the criminals and their deep-seated rooted corruption machines, to notice an obvious lack of transparency and accountability. We have had 55 years of empty promises. What we want is action. And we want to see the results, not just hear about them.

I warn that this transition period is very critical for the Tunisian people. We may have ministers whose hands are less dirty, or who chose to look the other way and not speak up under the ZABA regime. However, they have a very powerful, well-managed, well-financed, and very savvy underground police force. Some are militia, some are hired to stir trouble, and others are adept dividing us. They are the ones who tortured us, stole from us, terrorized us, and possibly killed some our loved ones.

I advise you to organize and rally behind the more intellectually mature of you. I warn you not to let your guard down and go about your business as if nothing happened. Make your voices heard in a passive way. Take to the airwaves and get others to help. Create committees and watch groups. Invite foreign experts, and NGO who have witnessed regime transitions in the past. Ask for transparency and results (proof) of all investigations into the prior regime.

We need a government OF the people, BY the people, and FOR the people.

Prime Minister Ghannouchi insulted me!

Long time RDC member, and Interim PM Mohamed Ghannouchi said yesterday on a television interview that he was fearful for his life, saying “ avait peur, comme tous les Tunisiens”.

As a Tunisian, I am utterly insulted. Mr. Ghannouchi, his entourage of RDC ministers, and others associated with it, continue to believe that the Tunisian citizen is simply stupid. As the ex-President’s right hand man for many years, he is no different, or may be worse. A sign of being a coward is to witness crimes against humanity, do nothing about them, or worse help hide them, in fear of calling attention to yourself. Too scared to even run away or disassociate from the criminals.

Many Tunisians are living abroad, against their will, away from their families and friends and the country they grew up to love, have lost their possessions and in some cases family members, because of Mr. Gannouchi looking the other way. They were never afraid. Crimes of all sorts had happened under his nose, and those of the same people he is asking us to trust.

I reject the notion that he is like all Tunisians. Did he ever have to whisper in his own home in fear the walls might report him? Was he ever refused a job because he was not a card carrying member of the party? Did he ever skip a meal, sometimes two, like most of us, me included, so he can feed the old and very young of us? Did he ever have to choose between medicine, school for his children, or food like real Tunisians?

Mr. Ghannouchi, you and your clan, are nothing like us. My father had his scull cracked open by the French, he was imprisoned, and exiled.  As a University student, I was imprisoned and brutally beat by the regime of the man you served as PM. You are nothing like me or my father.

La Tunisie de demain / Tunisia of tomorrow

    (French version)                                                                                            lundi 17 janvier 2011

J’exhorte tous ceux qui lisent  cet article de se réunir contre les rebelles , les actes criminels, et  ces actuels actes de grabuge  des richesse ? N’oublions pas nos compatriotes qui ont versé de leur sang pour nous, pour qu’on  se privent de 24 ans d’Enfer. Laissons nous apprendre  de l’histoire, la nôtre et celle des autres, et collaborer  pour un  objectif commun . Chacun de nous lutte pour le bonheur, la liberté et le droit au travail ; donc je vous demande de s’arrêter un moment, réfléchir et  débattre « quelle  Tunisie nous voulons pour nous et pour nos futures générations ? »

 Nous n’avons pas le choix, il fallait  décidé notre avenir qui sera un exemple pour d’autres pays arabes et musulmans. Nous le faisons d’une manière transparente et démocratique,  tout en permettant la participation de toutes les avis, les partis et  les affiliations. Nous ne voulons pas être un autre pays sub-saharien embourbé dans la guerre civile  ou la purification ethnique. Nous sommes tous des Tunisiens et nous sommes tous des Arabes, peu importe nos religions.

Je suis un grand partisan pour la séparation entre la religion et la politique. J’ai tellement vécu et tellement lis a propos de l’histoire dans le monde, pour  savoir que les plus réussites démocraties permettent les deux libertés selon une constitution. Nous pouvons être une vraie démocratie et une vraie société musulmane.

Je fais appel au prochaine leadership du pays à adopter une stratégie passive. La tolérance des autres, mêmes ceux qui paraissent extrêmes, est une alternative  mieux que la dictature et les lois de terreur. Traitez vos citoyens avec respect et dignité, ils vous suivront. Gouvernez avec la terreur et ils révolteront contre vous.

Tunisiens dans le monde entier, partout où ils  résident, n’ont aucun autre choix, que de considérer une vraie réforme démocratique. Notre pays ne peut pas se permettre une autre alternative.

Lotfi Saibi

NO DEPOTISM & NO NEPOTISM

For all Tunisians alike, young and old, rich and poor, from the north to the south, these are extraordinary times. And we face an extraordinary challenge. The leaders we will soon choose will be faced with tough decisions in the months and years ahead. Their only responsibility is the commitment they have to serve our country and all of its citizens. No role in history could be more important or more difficult. Tunisians stand for freedom, in all its facets (forms).

We, the citizens of Tunisia, need to be united in our belief, vision, and mission of guaranteeing full representation for all. From Tozeur to Tunis, Bizerte to Bin Guirdan, Kasserine to Kelibia, Sidi Bouzid to Sousse, we need to be united against any man, group, political system, or nation that is hostile to our freedom.

The jasmine revolution equals any great revolution in human history. Our young generation led us to emancipation. For that we owe them a brighter future. They seek an end to injustice, tyranny, corruption, and exploitation. More than an end of a regime, we seek a new beginning.

Adversaries of freedom, some of whom are still in power, are now seeking to reap the fruits of freedom trees, irrigated by the blood of innocent young Tunisians. Their aggression is often more concealed than open. They have personally fired no guns. And they are seldom seen. They send their agitators, snipers, and militias to terrorize our kids, burn our businesses, and rob our homes. When we band together and march, their assassins kill and terrorize our sons, brothers, fathers, and sisters.

These adversaries of freedom plan to consolidate power, to control, and finally destroy the hopes of the bravest young men and women of the 21st century.

There is no simple single policy which will move us forward. Our commitment to freedom and street slogans are only but a beginning. What we need are intellectual maturity and wisdom, not destruction of property, in-fighting, and wealth-grabbing. There is much more we can do, and must do.

First, let us decide on who among us has the intellectual know-how to navigate us through these treacherous waters and uncertain times. This can only be accomplished through real, open, and honest dialogue. For if we are seeking a democracy, we need to begin now.