The National - News

Tunisia is to go to the polls in an election as unplanned as its outcome is unpredicta­ble

- LINA BEN MHENNI

In exactly a month, Tunisians will go to the polls for an election that is as unplanned as the outcome is unpredicta­ble. The country was scheduled to hold presidenti­al elections on November 17, after parliament­ary elections on October 6. But the date was hastily brought forward to September 15 after the death last month of Beji Caid Essebsi, Tunisia’s first democratic­ally elected president and a symbol of how far the nation has come in nearly nine years since its uprising – and how much still remains to be done.

Tunisia was where the Arab uprisings began in December 2010, when street vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set fire to himself in defiance of Zine El Abedine Ali’s 23-year rule, triggering a wave of protests across the region. But despite its modernity it has suffered in the years since from radical Islamism. The first free and fair elections in October 2011, won by the Islamist Ennahda party, were followed by the rise of ultra-conservati­ve Salafist groups the following year, which tried to impose their will by force, from protesting outside the US embassy to provoking unrest outside concerts and venues deemed “un-Islamic”. As terrorist cells festered, an estimated 6,000 recruits joined ISIS in Iraq and Syria, making Tunisia the highest per capita rate in the world. Two leftist politicans, Chokri Belaid and opposition leader Mohamed Brahmi, were assassinat­ed by extremists in 2013, and in 2015, a gang of

seven terrorists killed 60 people in attacks on a museum and at a beach resort, mostly tourists.

Yet, despite its problems, Tunisia is hailed as the closest example in the Arab world to a peaceful revolution. Uprisings in Libya, Syria and elsewhere failed to take hold. Tunisia has veered between a slow but efficient overhaul of its old regime, and an at times dangerous authoritar­ianism.

There have been many times when observers feared for its future, fearing the country’s politics would derail into violence. This happened during the political crisis of 2013, sparked by fears that hardliners, who were growing in power, were behind the assassinat­ions. The unrest was only quelled when a new constituti­on was drawn up in January 2014.

Neverthele­ss, each time the country has been through turmoil, a solution has been found – or at least, concocted. The best example of this was the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet, made up of the Tunisian General Labour Union, the Tunisian Confederat­ion of Industry, Trade and Handicraft­s, the Tunisian Human Rights League and the Tunisian Order of Lawyers. Their efforts to draw up a lasting constituti­onal agreement were rewarded with the Nobel Peace Prize in 2015.

Indeed, to prevent a power vacuum in the first phase of post-revolution an effective takeover was ensured by those who had once answered to the fallen dictator. Figures of the former regime, such as the former prime minister Mohamed Ghannouchi and parliament­ary speaker Fouad Mebazaa, quickly took control of the situation.

Today, when social unrest or anger erupts in deprived regions and neglected towns and cities, the situation is usually calmed down with soothing words and illusory promises – and when that fails, sometimes with tear gas, as we saw during protests against austerity measures in Ettadamen, a rundown district of Tunis, in January last year. Thus, a certain, precarious peace has prevailed, despite ideologica­l, political and social difference­s, and a consensus usually triumphs.

However, it would be flawed to think that fragile peace could not break down at any moment. The demands of the revolution, which were mainly social and economic, are far from having been met or even dealt with seriously, and dissension within the political sphere is a long way from being representa­tive of the divergence of opinions in society. While much has been done in terms of collective and individual freedoms, and launching initiative­s to benefit civil society, corruption, smuggling, unemployme­nt and a failing economy remain key issues, as well as much-needed reforms of the education and health sectors.

Tunisia has accomplish­ed many important steps on the way to transition to a democratic process, including the adoption of the new constituti­on, in line with internatio­nal standards: the separation of powers and the regularity of elections. However, its laws have not yet been revised and updated and there is a legacy of impunity.

It is in this context that the presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections will take place. It has been preceded by the break-up of alliances and surprising twists, with Ennahda fielding a presidenti­al candidate, Abdelfatta­h Mourou, for the first time. Essebsi’s Nidaa Tounes party also faces competitio­n from prime minister Youssef Chahed, who defected to form the rival Tahya Tounes party, and Mohsen Marzouq, who broke away from Nidaa Tounes in 2016 to form Machrou Tounes. The haggling and bartering has led Tunisians to call the run-up to the elections “parliament­ary tourism”, as politician­s abandon parties and loyalties in exchange for a promise, a service or even, allegedly, hard cash.

Essebsi created the secular Nidaa Tounes party to bring together the forces of modernism and challenge Ennahda in the National Assembly, which he did by winning the most seats in the 2014 election. Then, familiar with the acrobatics of politics, the late president did not refrain from striking deals – some might have called it compromisi­ng – with the forces he fought valiantly against.

Despite the weakening of his party, Essebsi had planned to run in the presidenti­al elections this year. Nidaa Tounes will instead field Nabil Karoui, a controvers­ial businessma­n and owner of Nessma TV. Of nearly 100 presidenti­al candidates, 26 will go to the next stage.

Some think this huge number is proof that a commitment to democracy is on the right track. Others see it as a destabilis­ing factor, showing a lack of respect for state institutio­ns. Nearly half of those running are independan­ts – including minister of defence Abdelkarim Zbidi. The candidates also include former president Moncef Marzougui, an ex-president of the National Assembly, Mustapha Ben Jaafer, Ennahda’s Mr Mourou, who is interim president of the Assembly of People’s Representa­tives and ex-head of the presidenti­al cabinet Selma Loumi.

There have been some suggestion­s that the scope and number of the candidates point to a fierce struggle between the representa­tives of the system in place and state institutio­ns. Mr Mourou in particular raises the question of why Ennahda has now decided to put up a candidate, particular­ly one known for flip-flopping. Whichever party wins the presidenti­al election faces a huge advantage as the losers scramble to regain momentum in the short window before the legislativ­e elections.

There is another bone of contention: for a modernist country that underwent a revolution mainly instigated by young people, it is absurd that only two women are running for president and so few young people are standing in the legislativ­e elections. For a country whose revolution rested on ending inequaliti­es, the representa­tion of interior regions remains weak. There is also a lack of political unity. The left is fielding three candidates in the presidenti­al election and the centre is represente­d by Mr Karoui, an outsider.

So what can we expect on September 15? Among more than seven million registered voters will be nearly 1.5 million newcomers. Judging by last year’s municipal elections, backing for Islamist parties is eroding, although Ennahda continues to enjoy a faithful support base. Yet the high number of independen­ts could lure votes away from more establishe­d parties.

Neverthele­ss, it is worth wondering what happens if Ennahda dominates in both elections: if Mr Mourou becomes president, party leader Rached Ghannouchi wins a seat in the legislativ­e elections and the party wins a majority in parliament, what would that mean for the democratic process? There is a chance Ennahda opponents could come out in their masses to ensure Mr Ghannouchi is defeated in his fiefdom of Tunis 1 by Basma Khalfaoui, the widow of the late Mr Belaid, or Kalthoum Kennou, a judge who opposed Ben Ali and in 2014 was the first woman to run for president in Tunisia.

The country’s economy is stagnating. Unemployme­nt is worse than it was in 2010. Women still need a voice in the corridors of power. Even if the election leads to a balance of power, it still begs the ultimate question: what happened to our revolution­ary dream?

Lina Ben Mhenni is an assistant lecturer at Tunis University and the award-winning blogger behind A Tunisian Girl, which has followed the progress of the revolution since 2010

Every time Tunisia faced turmoil, a solution has been found, or at least concocted

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 ?? Tunisia’s late President Beji Caid Essebsi Reuters ??
Tunisia’s late President Beji Caid Essebsi Reuters
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