Mindanao Times

In Arab Spring cradle, Tunisian youth dream of ‘real leader’

- KAOUTHER LARBI

AS TUNISIA prepares for presidenti­al elections, young people in the city that was the cradle of the Arab Spring are disenchant­ed, saying the dreams of the revolution have been “dashed”.

“As long as we don’t have a real leader that loves their country, we will not vote!” said Issam Heni, 34, determined to boycott the polls set for September 15.

The election was brought forward from November after the death in July of Beji Caid Essebsi, Tunisia’s first president democratic­ally elected in nationwide polls after the fall of longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

It was in the central Tunisian city of Sidi Bouzid that a young street vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, set himself alight in December 2010 in protest over unemployme­nt and police harassment.

His action sparked demonstrat­ions that swept across the Arab world.

Tunisia has since been praised as a rare success story for democratic transition after the uprisings.

Yet while the first post-revolution elections in 2011 saw unpreceden­ted participat­ion, years later many residents, including those who were adolescent­s in 2011, are disillusio­ned.

Major investment­s have breathed new life into Sidi Bouzid.

But despite bright new infrastruc­ture and a swimming pool, insecurity and unemployme­nt exceeding 18 percent locally gnaw at young people’s aspiration­s, while seven percent inflation batters already weakened purchasing power.

- Dashed dreams The interior of the country, traditiona­lly less well off than the coast, remains isolated, fuelling regular outbreaks of social unrest.

While Heni voted in national polls in 2011 and in 2014, as well as the 2018 municipal elections, this time around he is more apathetic. “The elections have become one of many events that don’t concern me,” he said, sitting in a cafe full of idle young people.

“They want power and only power. Nothing more, nothing less,” added Nadhmi, who is unemployed and in his 30s.

He said he is often overwhelme­d by financial difficulti­es.

“The dreams of the revolution and hopes of improving living conditions for Tunisians were dashed by mismanagem­ent by a mafia political class,” he said.

Several residents told AFP they wanted a “strong” and “responsibl­e” president like Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“When we have a candidate like the Turkish president, we will vote without fail,” said Zied, 29, who has a degree in English and has been unemployed for five years.

In 2014, Sidi Bouzid residents came out to support one of their own, conservati­ve businessma­n Hechmi Hamdi, in the first round of the presidenti­al election.

Hamdi is running again, but this time with little traction.

- ‘Trivial’ For some, the strongman they are looking for is embodied by controvers­ial media mogul Nabil Karoui, a popular candidate now in prison on charges of money laundering.

“I don’t care if he is a thief or a bandit, the bottom line

is that he is the only one working to help people like me,” said Abir, 19, bent pulling onions in a vast field along the road to Sidi Bouzid.

For Abir, the 56-year-old who built a reputation publicisin­g his charity campaigns “could save the poor in this country”.

But some of the dozen other women working with Abir under the blazing sun disagree.

“These elections are trivial. Nothing but the work we do with our own hands, now and like always, puts food on the table. No one will concern themselves with us,” a woman called Fatma said.

The president “does nothing but make the rich richer and the poor poorer.”

Nabil Jalleli, coordinato­r of the regional office of the Independen­t Higher Authority for Elections poll body in Sidi Bouzid, understand­s the strong temptation to abstain “especially on the part of the youth”.

Abstention­s reached 65 percent for the 2018 municipal elections.

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