Showing posts with label Tunisian riots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tunisian riots. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

Tunisia forms new government amidst protests

065Tunisian interim leadership on Monday announced the formation of a new government as protests continued in the capital Tunis, France24 news reported.

The new government of national unity includes members of the opposition as announced by Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi. In addition, established political figures were included too in a desperate attempt to bring back political stability in the North African country.

The crisis in Tunisia escalated after the ouster of former President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. The Prime Minister remarked that foreign, interior and defense ministers under Ben Ali will continue in their posts.

Monday, 17 January 2011

U.S. government issues travel warning for Tunisia

State Department

The U.S. Government on Sunday issued a travel warning for Tunisia as violence has gripped the country, leaving scores dead and injured. Travel has also been disrupted.

Saturday, 15 January 2011

Hillary Clinton: Tunisia is enduring a significant transition

Hillary Clinton in BerlinUnited States State Secretary Hillary Clinton on Friday said that Tunisia is enduring a significant transition following reports that President Ben Ali left the North African country.


"The United States continues to closely monitor the rapidly evolving events in Tunisia, where earlier today President Ben Ali left his country following several weeks of demonstrations and popular unrest," said Clinton.

Clinton remarked that the United States condemned the violence and urged restraint on all sides. The State Secretary added that the U.S. expects that Tunisian authorities will work on ensuring the right of its people to peacefully assemble and express their views.

Arab Riots: Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution

Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution

By Mona Eltahawy

Not once in my 43 years have I thought that I'd see an Arab leader toppled by his people. It is nothing short of poetic justice that it was neither Islamists nor invasion-in-the-name-of-democracy that sent the waters rushing onto Ben Ali's ship but, rather, the youth of his country.

Read more at the Washington Post


Tunisia gets a change of Zine

by Globe and Mail Editorial

The first successful overthrow of an Arab leader by his own people since the colonial era ended is a warning sign to many of the region’s autocrats that their grip on power is no longer assured.

Read more



Tunisia Seethes

by New York Times Editorial

With as many as 30 people dead and the country in an uproar, criticism has been pouring in from Washington, the European Union and the United Nations. France, Mr. Ben Ali’s most influential ally, has so far remained shamefully silent.

Read more


Ouster of Tunisia president: An opportunity for Arab autocrats to respond to the people

by Christian Science Monitor Editorial Board

The demonstrations were sparked in December when an educated but typically jobless young man killed himself after authorities confiscated fruits and vegetables he was selling without a permit. As one witness told Reuters, however, “It is not just about unemployment any more. It’s about freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, all the freedoms.”

Read more


Is Tunisia Next?

by Elliott Abrams

What’s next? The regime has no real alternatives except members of Ben Ali’s family, a solution unlikely to satisfy Tunisian society. While his wife is said to view herself as a successor, and this might have worked ten years ago, the time for an Argentine-like hand-off to the ruler’s wife is over.

Read more at the Council on Foreign Relations


Tunisia: Dependence on Europe Fuels Unemployment Crisis and Protests

by Lahcen Achy

Even as the level of education among job seekers in Tunisia has improved, the government has failed to make policies guaranteeing enough job creation to absorb new entrants to the labor market, especially among those with university degrees.

Read more at the CATO Institute



Zain Al-A'abdeen Bin Ali, President of Tunisia since 1987 (!)Tunisia: Lessons of Authoritarian Collapse

by Thomas Carother

With democracy’s spread having slowed over the last decade we've gotten out of the habit of receiving such news and have forgotten some of the basic lessons of authoritarian collapse. The fall of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia usefully reminds us of them.

Reade more at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace


Obama's 'Arab Spring'?

by Marc Lynch

Yesterday I noted the spread of seemingly unrelated protests and clashes through a diverse array of Arab states -- Tunisia, Jordan, Kuwait, Egypt. Last night, protests spread to Algeria, partly in response to rising prices on basic food items but more deeply by the same combination of economic desperation, fury over perceived corruption, and a blocked political order.

Read more at the Foreign Policy