Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Tunisian Premier Is Target of New Protests

European Pressphoto Agency Demonstrators marched in Tunis on Wednesday to call for all members of the party of the ousted dictator, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, to withdraw from the newly formed interim government.

TUNIS —Hundreds of Tunisian protesters again took to the streets here on Wednesday to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi, seen as the right-hand man of the ousted dictator, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.

The demonstrators marched down the capital’s central Avenue Bourguiba, chanting slogans against the prime minister and seeking to reinforce pressure on the tottering new administration that has pledged to lead the country to elections after weeks of turmoil and bloodshed. At least four cabinet members quit the new administration on Tuesday.

Protesters have shifted their anger to Mr. Ghannouchi and a number of ruling-party ministers in the interim government who have retained the same powerful posts they held under Mr. Ben Ali. Mr. Ghannouchi has insisted that they have all “clean hands.”

Mr. Ben Ali and his circle were widely accused of using their authority to enrich themselves while ordinary citizens struggled.On Wednesday, the Swiss government announced that it would move to freeze the Swiss assets of Mr. Ben Ali “and his entourage,” and The Associated Press reported that a Tunisian prosecutor had opened an investigation into all overseas assets of the ousted leader and his family.

In Geneva, Navanethem Pillay, the United Nations high commissioner for human rights, said that an assessment team would head to Tunisia within a week to investigate possible abuses during four weeks of protests that drove Mr. Ben Ali from power. More than 100 people died during that period, Ms. Ally said, including more than 70 killed by live fire from security forces.

The United Nations team, she said, would help Tunisia’s interim government see that abuses of the “recent and more distant past are investigated and those found responsible for breaches are brought to justice.”

At the same time, Reuters reported that the country’s remaining political prisoners were freed on Wednesday, including members of the Islamist party, which remains banned. Najib Chebbi, an opposition minister in the coalition government, told Reuters, no party members remained in jail.

Amid efforts to begin addressing the wrongs of the past government, it remained unclear when Mr. Ghannouchi would summon the new administration to its first, formal meeting.

In Tunis, protesters — fewer than at earlier marches — held up banners demanding that all vestiges of Mr. Ben Ali’s party be expunged. Police vans lined their route, but compared with previous days, when billows of tear-gas rolled over the city center, the police seemed initially at least to be holding back from confrontation. The authorities also said they would ease a curfew, allowing people to say on the street until 8 p.m.

The new government is backed by the military and a tiny group of recognized opposition leaders, but it seems caught in a war on two fronts. On one side are Mr. Ben Ali’s former security forces, which the government has accused of continued acts of violence.

On the other are the protesters in the streets, who demanded a faster and more radical purge of the old government and whose loyalties the new government is struggling to maintain.

“You sympathize with the current government,” one woman shouted, expressing a common sentiment. “How are you supposed to represent the people?”

Some opposition leaders expressed fears that a collapse of the interim coalition — it would be the third rapid-fire shift of power in less than a week — could trigger a military takeover. Yet, as the police moved forcibly to break up the demonstrations, many protesters said they thought they had much more to fear from the former ruling party, R.C.D., than they did from the military, a traditionally apolitical force.

There was also a looming wild card: the revival of the Islamist party. The government said that for now it would continue to block the return of the party’s exiled founder, while he repeated that his party espouses a moderate pluralism.

Many Tunisians said they were waiting — some hopefully, some anxiously — to see what kind of rebirth the once-flourishing but long-outlawed Islamist political party might have. In a radio interview, Mr. Ghannouchi said that the exiled leader, Rached Ghannouchi — who is no relation — would be banned from the country until the government passed an amnesty law lifting a conviction he was given in absentia under the Ben Ali government.

The exiled leader, meanwhile, made clear that his party envisioned a society far more liberal and open than Iran or Saudi Arabia. In an interview with The Financial Times, Rached Ghannouchi said his party had signed a shared statement of principles with the other Tunisian opposition groups that included freedom of expression, freedom of association and women’s rights.

It remained unclear how much support he commands in the country. Some argued that Tunisian society today was too resolutely secular for the Islamists to find much support, after two decades of efforts by Mr. Ben Ali’s vast secret police to eliminate the party and cripple it.

“They have people who are 50 years old or 60 years old, but they don’t have anybody under 40 because of the repression,” said Ahmed Bouazzi, an executive committee member of the largest opposition group, the Progressive Democratic Party.

Others, however, argued that the religious convictions of Tunisians would assure the Islamic parties a strong base of support, especially away from the more cosmopolitan coasts. “Look, they will be easily the most popular party,” said one analyst who opposes the Islamists, speaking on the condition of anonymity to avoid angering family and friends. “No one can say anything against anything that is Islamic.”

Mr. Bouazzi of the Progressive Democratic Party said that over the last three days the military had helped to arrest about half of the 7,000 officers who made up Mr. Ben Ali’s personal security force, who the government says has perpetuated violence since his flight. “They charged them with felonies and killings and so on,” Mr. Bouazzi added.

Adding to the complexity of the political situation, the composition of the crowd in the street protests seemed to be changing. In stark contrast to the relatively affluent group that turned out to demand Mr. Ben Ali’s resignation as president last Friday — many of them joining the protests for the first time — a more determined core took to the streets of the capital Tuesday. They held their ground against the clubs of charging motorcycle police officers, hurling canisters of tear gas back at the officers before regrouping to return again and again for hours until the evening curfew loomed.

Among them were students, trade unionists and supporters of the outlawed Islamist party.

As in recent days, the Tunisian military appeared to step in between the protesters and the police. During one standoff, soldiers begged the protesters not to advance in the face of an advancing line of police officers. When they stopped, the police soon retreated, to cheers from the protesters. “Long live the people, long live the military,” they chanted at times during the day.

Their principal target was the R.C.D. party, but some protesters also directed their rage at the opposition leaders who had stood by their side before Mr. Ben Ali’s flight, but then agreed to sit in the unity government. In response, three junior members from a labor union resigned, and a fourth opposition member, Mustafa ben Jafaar, the health minister, reportedly resigned or suspended his role.

The protesters repeated a refrain heard since the days when Mr. Ben Ali was still firmly in power and his snipers fired on protesters: that Tunisians would win and keep their freedom on their own, without any help from Americans, French or others.

Sonia Ben Sultan, 53, said she had coughed through clouds of tear gas in the demonstrations against Mr. Ben Ali last Friday, and “it was the best day of my life.

“No political party, only God,” she said. “Not terrorism. I want freedom, I want equality, I want righteousness. That is Islam.” Referring to her head scarf, she added, “I cover my hair but I don’t cover my brain.”

At times bystanders sang the national anthem with the protesters. But not all of the bystanders agreed with the demands. “I’m not O.K. with this government,” said Ramzi Achich, emerging from a cloud of gas on the Avenue de Paris. “But we must at least have a country that can protect us.”

Standing next to him, Idriss Bouazizi, a barber, suggested Tunisians had come too far to retreat now. Mr. Bouazizi said he had returned from France a few weeks ago to be here for the revolution. “People are watching,” he said. “We’re not inhaling gas. We’re inhaling freedom.”

Chehidi Souhir, 24, recalled the uneventful stability of Mr. Ben Ali’s police state. “It was peaceful. It was a comfortable life. He made the city look good,” she said. “But poor people didn’t have any chance to live.”

“Democracy” she said with a smile. “No fear.”

By: Kareem Fahim (ny times)


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