Los Angeles Times

Corruption is still Tunisia’s challenge

The nation’s biggest problem isn’t veiled women but graft and cronyism.

- By Sarah Chayes Sarah Chayes, a contributi­ng writer to Opinion, is the author of “The Punishment of Virtue: Inside Afghanista­n After the Taliban” and a resident associate at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace.

In the year since the Arab Spring, attention has been riveted on one issue above all others: the place of religious practice in public life. In Tunisia, where the movement began, full-face and body veils, now often worn complete with gloves, are increasing­ly visible on the streets — an exotic sight for locals and foreigners alike. And the secular opposition seems increasing­ly strident in its conviction that the Islamist government is driving the country the way of Iran.

But it wasn’t religion that set off the Jasmine Revolution; it was acute economic injustice and the pervasive and structured corruption that helped produce it. The fate of Tunisia, and its neighbors, may depend most on whether that lingering problem is addressed.

You can usually tell which buildings in this sparkling, white-and-sky-blue country the family of former dictator Zine el Abidine ben Ali had a stake in; they’re eyesores. Last month, a small group of protesters gathered in front of one of them, a squat, mustard-colored hotel complex on a beach in the town of Kilibia.

Kilibia, home to extensive Roman and Punic archaeolog­ical sites, also boasts beaches of silky, ash-white sand, which audibly sings underfoot as you walk across it. The seafront is exactly the kind of resource members of the Ben Ali family liked to commandeer for their personal gain.

They had shares in several sprawling hotels here, including the yellow one, built with an Italian investor. Typically for the Tunisian tourism industry, it functioned and still functions as a closed system: Tunisians are not allowed on the beach; the hotel employs no Tunisians except for a few guards, purchases no Tunisian supplies or food — not even any luscious local olive oil. Everything is shipped in from Italy.

Now the hotel is dumping coarse yellow sand across the top half of the beach to cushion tourists’ feet from a rock formation.

This may sound like a trivial transgress­ion. But it typifies the arrogation of public resources and financial opportunit­ies for the personal enrichment of regime insiders that sparked last year’s uprising.

Under the Ben Ali dictatorsh­ip, physical repression, torture and disappeara­nces were fairly uncommon. The regime perpetrate­d its oppression by means of a diabolical­ly intrusive system of state corruption.

This particular­ity has prompted Tunisian activists to blaze new paths in human rights doctrine. They are seeking to expand the definition of “gross violations of human rights” to include systematic economic crimes. They want perpetrato­rs to answer for these crimes in a public reckoning, as part of a transition­al justice process, like the ones in South Africa or Rwanda that focused on physical abuses.

Tunisia’s new Cabinet includes a minister for “governance and anti-corruption.” This is an innovation, certainly, but activists worry that his appointmen­t was more show than substance.

A commission establishe­d in the weeks after Ben Ali’s overthrow, and including public accountant­s and specialist­s in the intricacie­s of administra­tive or real estate law, examined some 5,000 complaints. The report it released in November exposed a vast system of structured corruption by which the Ben Ali in-laws and their cronies helped themselves to the best of everything: stakes in the most lucrative businesses, exemption from customs dues, choice public land. Government institutio­ns such as tax authoritie­s and the judiciary, even private banks, became instrument­s of coercion. Recalcitra­nt chief executives would get slapped with an audit or see their loans dry up or their authorizat­ions revoked.

The commission developed evidence on 400 cases, which it transferre­d to courts. But according to member Amine Ghali, only a handful have been taken up by a judiciary still largely staffed by Ben Aliera personnel.

“We’re no one’s first priority,” says Ghali, detailing examples of neglect by the current government. “We have no office equipment or vehicles, no power to subpoena witnesses or to protect them. Members who are government employees don’t even get relieved of their regular duties but have to do this work on the side. You get the feeling the government doesn’t care if we succeed.”

Many fear that the current political elite, including the leadership of the ruling Islamist party, intends to quietly appropriat­e the old structures and practices for their own benefit. Recently passed provisions of this year’s budget include Ben Ali-style shelters for potentiall­y ill-gotten gains, in return for a financial contributi­on. Taoufik Chamari, of the National Anti-Corruption Network, warns of the “real risk that the same system of corruption will be maintained, legitimize­d by new beneficiar­ies.”

Corruption is a less photogenic issue than heavily veiled women. Yet when it grows so pervasive as to amount to capture of the state by a structured criminal network, as it did in Tunisia and in Egypt, public outrage can get explosive. Many here predict that if Tunisia does not use this remarkable post-revolution­ary moment to impose accountabi­lity, then a frustrated people may truly radicalize, turning to militant, puritanica­l readings of Islam to afford a recourse the postrevolu­tionary democracy did not.

As the example of the yellow hotel suggests, actions of Westerners — conscious or unconsciou­s — matter. Our support for Arab nations in transition, our behavior as investors and visitors, should break with past habits of contributi­ng to corruption.

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