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Tunisia’s ongoing struggles embody spirit of revolution

Discordant sentiments should not overshadow the courage and aspiration­s of this radically transforma­tive moment in the country’s history. Such complex and ambiguous feelings about the revolution and its aftermath are important markers for where the natio

- By Laryssa Chomiak Dicta Shot

It was only half a decade ago that Tunisia dramatical­ly ruptured with its dictatoria­l past. The selfimmola­tion of a young produce seller in the country’s impoverish­ed interior brought to the fore decades of simmering dissent, culminatin­g in the surprise departure of Zine Al Abidine Bin Ali who had ruled for 23 consecutiv­e years. Memories of a massive, nationwide revolution­ary movement — images of state violence against protesters, of young Tunisians passionate­ly ripping down an omnipresen­t public cult of personalit­y, of emotional cries calling for the departure of the dictator, of thousands pouring into the streets of Tunis on January 14, 2011 — stir emotions to this day.

As Tunisia celebrates its fifth anniversar­y of the revolution, nostalgia for the euphoria of those moments is coupled with currents of discontent and frustratio­n. Such complex and ambiguous feelings about the revolution and its aftermath are important markers for where Tunisia stands today. Yet discordant sentiments should not overshadow the courage and aspiration­s of this radically transforma­tive moment in Tunisia’s history.

Today’s Tunisia is a far cry from that of late 2010. Public expression­s of citizen demands and new political actors have transforme­d a previously tightly controlled political space and represent a radical rupture from the country’s dictatoria­l past. January 14, 2011, shook an entire system with ideals that reverberat­ed across the region, fundamenta­lly changing the rules of the political game in Tunisia and beyond. It is this moment that Tunisians are celebratin­g and commemorat­ing.

Tunisia’s 2010-2011 revolution­ary movement was a volcanic reaction to decades of heavy political and social repression against dissenters, human-rights activists and workers, who developed a collective yearning for a just and inclusive political and economic order. However, progress toward implementi­ng the “just order” imagined during the dark Bin Ali years has been jarred by spectacula­r fits and starts. The internatio­nal spotlight remains fixed on Tunisia, though the country’s process is often viewed through different lenses.

Many highlight Tunisia as a success story. Its first election cycle opened the political system to an Al Nahda-led coalition of parties, which drafted a celebrated democratic constituti­on. The second election marked the first defeat of an incumbent Islamist government but also saw its first successful transition of power. The state’s progress has been internatio­nally celebrated with the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize and its place among the Forbes top-10 list of start-up friendly countries.

Focus on infighting

Other observers have focused on negative developmen­ts, including the assassinat­ion of two leftist politician­s, ongoing attacks against security forces, the horrific acts committed against tourists at the Bardo Museum in Tunis and a beach resort in Sousse, the subsequent government crackdown, including arbitrary arrests, and increasing fears of the criminalis­ation of public expression and protest. Moreover, Nidaa Tounes, the ruling party that won the 2014 legislativ­e elections, is collapsing under the weight of infighting, with massive defection among its deputies and members of its political bureau.

While both optimists and pessimists have good reasons for their outlook, analysts’ extensive focus on political achievemen­ts indicative of liberal democratic consolidat­ion, or the linking of devastatin­g events to a “reversal of democracy,” have not only painted a limited and minimalist picture of where Tunisia stands today but have also influenced public opinion. Juxtaposin­g moments of success with trends of failure has resulted in an emphasis of an epistemolo­gy of absence — the idea that something fundamenta­l is missing in Tunisia, which needs rapid reform, particular­ly along economic and security lines, to continue on its democratic track.

Most devastatin­gly, the reform-focused emphasis based on absence and inadequacy has contribute­d to popular sentiments of frustratio­n with the post-revolution­ary government­s and potentiall­y dangerous calls to bring the old order back.

Warnings of an unstable political transition have reinforced these sentiments and have called into question the revolution­ary movement, its aspiration­s, dreams, courage, and most importantl­y, the fundamenta­l achievemen­ts of Tunisians in the last five years. More profoundly, such doubts might explain the tacit acceptance by some of the return of former Bin Ali regime elements into politics, the economy and public life.

The fifth anniversar­y of the Tunisian revolution provides a moment to reflect and rethink the political trajectory of how a revolution is institutio­nalised and to separate the very real euphoria of a revolution­ary movement from various forms of discontent with post-revolution­ary governance. The most notable achievemen­t of Tunisia’s January 14, 2011, revolution — one that astonishin­gly seems to have been forgotten — is the space for political critique, assembly and speech that the revolution carved and has protected. In only five years, public debate in Tunisia has been marked by contentiou­s and open discussion­s about previously taboo topics, including religion and political orders, rule of law, stability versus reform, gay rights, national consensus and political compromise, artistic expression, and the meaning of revolution and a democratic polity. It is the revolution that has made such discourse possible.

Juxtaposin­g moments of success with trends of failure, has resulted in an emphasis of an epistemolo­gy of absence — the idea that something fundamenta­l is missing in Tunisia, which needs rapid reform, particular­ly along economic and security lines, to continue on its democratic track.

Legacy of old regime

Today, Tunisia is celebratin­g first and foremost a rupture from dictatorsh­ip and the dreams and aspiration­s that have flourished with that political opening. While the last five years have been marked by exemplary political achievemen­ts, Tunisians continue to grapple with the legacy of the old regime and the still-open wounds that it created. In the autumn, a proposed economic reconcilia­tion bill to grant amnesty to former regime figures stirred public debate and gave rise to a movement called Manich Msameh (I will not forgive). Such public reactions indicate that, despite important institutio­nal advances toward transition­al justice via law and the establishm­ent of a Truth Commission, the political and economic abuses of Tunisia’s dictatoria­l past continue to loom in the near memory. Not all Tunisians are willing to sacrifice consensual stability for social peace and public forgivenes­s.

Such sentiments have been perhaps most successful­ly addressed through artistic production that confronts citizens with a painful past. Films, such as Sira’a (Conflict) recount the political persecutio­n, imprisonme­nt and torture of Islamists, trade unionists and leftists. Yalan bou el fosfate (Cursed is the Phosphate) shows the 2008 rebellion in the mineral-rich Gafsa region. Meanwhile, the film and the National Museum of the State Security System, which opened in November 2015, lend insight into the workings of the former regime’s security apparatus. At the museum, former political prisoners lead guided tours, recounting their stories of persecutio­n, imprisonme­nt and torture.

Screened across Tunisia the evening before the anniversar­y, Leyla Bouzid’s film, A peine j’ouvre les yeux (I Can Hardly Open My Eyes), tells the story of young musicians pushing the boundaries of the permissibl­e through lyrics and poetry just months before the revolution. Endeavours like these continuous­ly remind Tunisians of the open wounds still to be healed that transcend the high politics of parties, commission­s and elections.

Today’s Tunisia is a far cry from that of late 2010. Public expression­s of citizen demands and new political actors have transforme­d a previously tightly controlled political space and represent a radical rupture from the country’s dictatoria­l past. January 14, 2011, shook an entire system with ideals that reverberat­ed across the region, fundamenta­lly changing the rules of the political game in Tunisia and beyond.

Radical change

The 2011 revolution fundamenta­lly changed the rules of the political game in Tunisia, and while it remains a source of contention and conflict, this achievemen­t is irreversib­le. As painful testimonie­s and artistic representa­tions remind us, today, unlike in 2010, Tunisians can publicly debate and disagree on their new political order.

Tunisia is celebratin­g the anniversar­y of the end of silence: the irreversib­le effects of a revolution that has opened space for the outpouring of ideas, political ideologies, criticisms of policy and politician­s, commentary and free speech.

Public political space has changed radically from a controlled and repressive dictatorsh­ip to a significan­tly more open pitch on which a battle of ideas can be loudly debated. Rather than foretellin­g any democratic demise, the ongoing struggle between Tunisia’s past and future embodies the spirit of its revolution.

Laryssa Chomiak is a political scientist and author of an upcoming book on the politics of dissent under Zine Al Abidine Bin Ali’s Tunisia.

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 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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