Arab News

Tunisia’s ‘truth commission’ winds up four-year mission

- Files/ AFP

is submitted by Dec. 31.

The government, with the assistance of a parliament­ary follow-up committee, will have one year to draw up an action plan based on the recommenda­tions.

The commission’s task was to collect and disseminat­e testimonie­s, send some of those suspected of rape, murder, torture or corruption to specialise­d courts, and recommend measures to prevent any recurrence.

Operating in the only Arab Spring country which has kept to a democratic path since the 2011 revolt, its mandate has also been to seek national reconcilia­tion through a revival of the North African state’s collective memory.

The commission, whose mandate was extended in the spring until the end of 2018, has been studying more than 60,000 complaints and has this year sent dozens of cases to the courts.

Over the past four years, the panel has heard harrowing testimony from victims of torture in jail, some of which has been aired to large television audiences.

“From the very start we’ve worked under fire and come up against difficulti­es, due to the absence of political will,” commission official Khaled Krichi told AFP.

He said demands for the handover of judicial cases involving corruption had been rejected, as well as for archive materials from the Interior Ministry on prisoners who had suffered torture.

A contested amnesty law passed in 2017 cleared some officials suspected of administra­tive corruption.

The commission also faced political resistance with the return of former regime leaders to power, internal disputes as well as the lack of cooperatio­n by state institutio­ns.

Thirteen specialize­d courts have been set up and started work at the end of May on dozens of cases submitted by the commission.

Twenty trials are underway, mostly of victims of the 2011 revolution and of radical and leftist opposition figures tortured under the rule of Ben Ali or his predecesso­r Habib Bourguiba.

Krichi said settlement­s have been reached in 10 cases of financial corruption involving former regime figures, including that of Slim Chiboub, a son-in-law of Ben Ali, who has agreed to pay back 307 million dinars ($113 million).

The state, however, faced with accusation­s of torture and sexual violence, has rejected 1,000 demands for “reconcilia­tion” with the victims. A row has also broken out over compensati­on cases, with members of Parliament claiming the costs would bankrupt the state and that many claims were designed to benefit supporters of extremist movement Ennahdha.

At the end of November, the commission drew up criteria for compensati­on that exclude those with post-2011 government or parliament­ary posts.

Around 25,000 people are eligible to compensati­on from the Al-Karama ( Dignity) Fund establishe­d in 2014, according to Krichi.

It is being financed by donations, a percentage of the funds recovered through settlement­s and a one-time government grant of 10 million dinars ($3.7 million).

 ?? Demonstrat­ors clash with Tunisian security force personnel on Rome Avenue in Tunis on Jan. 18, 2011. The resignatio­n of three ministers rocked Tunisia’s fledgling unity government as protesters vented their anger at the new leadership just days after the  ??
Demonstrat­ors clash with Tunisian security force personnel on Rome Avenue in Tunis on Jan. 18, 2011. The resignatio­n of three ministers rocked Tunisia’s fledgling unity government as protesters vented their anger at the new leadership just days after the

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