The Guardian (USA)

Man can drop part of name denoting slave ancestry, Tunisian court rules

- Reuters in Tunis

A court in Tunisia has allowed an 81year-old man to remove a word from his name that marked him out as descended from slaves, in the country’s first ruling of its kind, his lawyer has said.

Tunisia abolished slavery in 1846, but critics say it has not done enough to address racism against black Tunisians, who make up 10-15% of the population and are mostly descended from slaves.

Campaigner­s said the case brought by Hamden Dali would open the door for others who wanted to drop the word “atig”, or “liberated by”, which originally denoted a freed slave and forms part of the names of many Tunisian families.

Dali’s lawyer, Hanen Ben Hassena, said the associatio­n with slavery was an assault on human dignity and the man’s adult children had faced discrimina­tion because of the family name, which had made it harder to get jobs.

“In ‘Atig Dali’, there is a certain humiliatio­n because it is as if the person is not free – there is a discomfort for the family to live with this name,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation after the ruling on Wednesday.

Black Tunisians are descended from sub-Saharan Africans brought to Tunisia by slave traders. Activists say they face unequal job prospects and high levels of poverty and are often portrayed negatively in the media.

Jamila Ksiksi, a member of parliament who played a role in passing an anti-discrimina­tion law called law 50, said the court’s ruling was “extraordin­ary”. “Civil society started this battle after the revolution [in 2011] and now we are seeing the fruits of this and of the law 50, which facilitate­d this achievemen­t,” she said.

Black Tunisians have historical­ly been underrepre­sented in government and the country appointed its first black minister, Kamel Deguiche, this year.

The president of the Tunisian antiracism associatio­n Mnemty, which has campaigned for anyone with a slave

 ?? Photograph: Fethi Belaid/AFP/Getty Images ?? A Black Lives Matter rally in Tunis in June. Activists say black Tunisians face unequal job prospects and high levels of poverty.
Photograph: Fethi Belaid/AFP/Getty Images A Black Lives Matter rally in Tunis in June. Activists say black Tunisians face unequal job prospects and high levels of poverty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States