Tunis. January 2018. Ines Mahmoud. All rights reserved.For
the past three weeks the streets of Tunisia have been echoing screams for
freedom, dignity and justice. These same calls led to the overthrow of Ben
Ali’s dictatorship seven years ago.
Fed
up with newly imposed austerity measures, the people are taking their anger to
the streets to send a clear message to the government. A big national
protest is now being organised for January 26. The Tunisian working class’
fight against poverty, corruption and unemployment is ever more present.
A
new campaign under the slogan of “Fech nstenew?” (what are we waiting for?) is going viral against the
neoliberal governments’ policies.
The
demands are a reduction in the prices of basic goods, an end to the
privatization of public institutions, free education, social and health care
for the unemployed as well as social welfare and housing for low-income
families.
In
its first weeks, the movement reached a nation-wide mobilization with protests
erupting all over the country. However, they have been met with harsh
repression; nearly 800 protestors and activists have been arrested with one protestor having been killed.
This
new Finance Act was put into effect on the 1 January 2018, entailing price
increases of basic goods such as food, electricity and gas, a reduction in
public sector employment as well as VAT increases.
Tunisia
is often praised as the shining example of “Arab revolutions”, however, not
much has changed since 2011, especially on an economic level.
The
unemployment rate remains at the same levels it was before the revolution
(15.2 percent for men and 22.8 percent for women). Furthermore, the country’s
already weak economy, which depends heavily on tourism, was further weakened after the terrorist attacks of 2015. Rising inflation and
depreciation of the Tunisian dinar hit a record low on 8 January 2018, trading at 3.011 against the Euro.
To
pander economic growth, the neoliberal government, led by the parties of
Islamist Ennahda and its counterpart Nidaa Tounes – which consist mainly of the
political elites of Ben Ali’s dictatorship – are relying heavily on foreign
investments and privatization.
In
December 2017, when Tunisia was put on a blacklist of seventeen jurisdictions deemed to be tax havens by the
European Union, the government decided to fully adhere to the IMF’s conditions of implementing drastic austerity
measures in order to receive the second instalment of a 2.9 billion dollar loan
that was approved in 2016. Consequently, the European Union recently proposed
taking Tunisia off the blacklist.
Tunis. January 2018. Manich Msamah. Public Domain.As
a reaction to these measures, activists from the Popular Front, the student
union (UGET), and from various social movements as well as civil society,
jointly criticised the government’s austerity measures and the conditions of
the IMF loan, stating in their first press release:
“all the successive governments of Tunisia
after 14 January have devoted themselves to the same economic and social
choices of the Ben Ali regime, the rich are getting richer, the poor are
getting poorer. (…) We are fed up with false promises and can no longer wait.
We can no longer live without social welfare, without free access to healthcare,
free education and social housing. We can no longer live without hope for change.”
Warda
Atig, student and activist from the student union UGET and founding member of
the “Fech Nstenew?” movement says the date for the launch of the campaign was
chosen due to its symbolical political meaning; thirty-four years ago, on 3
January 1984 bread-riots peaked across Tunisia.
Even
then, the increase in price of bread and other basic goods was the result of
austerity measures caused by the conditionality of an IMF loan taken up by the
government of ex-dictator Habib Bourgiba.
“Today
we are still paying for the IMF debts of Ben Ali” she says. In her opinion, the
Tunisian working class did not benefit from the IMF loan, on the contrary, “the
social condition has worsened,” Atig added.
Hamza
Abidi, student and independent activist from “Fech Nstenew?” and the
anti-corruption campaign “Manich Msamah” (I do not forgive) rejects the IMF
loan saying, “If we consider the experiences of countries that followed the
dictation of the IMF conditionality, such as Greece for example, we see that
their economies suffered.”
After
the release of the statement, Facebook groups were founded through which people
started organizing protests across the country. The backlash against the
campaign however happened simultaneously.
“When
our activists started distributing the statement in their regions and spraying
graffiti with our slogan on the streets, they were exposed to a great deal of
police harassment. There were more than fifty arrests in less than 48 hours,”
reports Wael Naouar from “Fech Nstenew”.
Tunis. January 2018. Ines Mahmoud. All rights reserved.On January 4, protests broke out in Kairouan as well as Tunis, Sfax, Ben Arous
and Sousse. Ever since, they have extended to the regions of Kasserine, Ariana,
Manouba, Sfax, Ben Arous, El Kef, Thala, Sidi Bouzid, Kairouan, Gafsa, Gabes,
Nabeul, El Kef, Kebili, Siliana Monastir, Mahdia and Beja. In regions most
affected by poverty such as Sidi Bouzid, protests have been the biggest.
Many
of the protests resulted in confrontations with the police; middle class cars
were destroyed and supermarkets were broken into. From then on, protests were met with police violence,
teargas and numerous arrests.
On
the night of January 8 in the city of Tebourba, the protestor Khomsi Yafrni was
killed. This is when the situation escalated. According to the
government, he died from respiration problems triggered by tear gas. Images circulating on social media however show how Khomsi was run
over by a police car. The autopsy report remains inaccessible to the public.
As
the news about the first martyr spread, activists from “Fech Nstenew” and “Manich Msamah” called for a demonstration
in the capital the following day.
“Manich Msamah” is an anti-corruption movement that is fighting against the reconciliation bill that granted amnesty to bureaucrats who systematically benefited from corruption under the dictatorship of Ben Ali.
“We
took to the streets to protest against police violence,” states Heythem Guesmi
from the “Manich Msamah” movement. Adding, “We are getting back to the streets
to protest against the impunity of the killers of the martyrs during the
revolution of 2010, 2011.”
Government
officials as well as mainstream media were quick to spread outrage
against the revolts that occurred on the night of January 8. The following day,
Prime Minister Youssef Chahed declared that “what happened yesterday was not a protest, but
sabotage and assault.” The right to protest would be guaranteed by the law,
however “in democratic countries” people should not demonstrate during the
night.
Houcine
Jaziri from Ennahda condemned the protests as well and called the leftist activists
behind the movement “petty bourgeoisie” who should end “their ideological
propaganda.”
In
a public statement by Noureddine Taboubi, secretary general of the Tunisian
labour union UGTT, condemned the destruction of property harshly. However,
political parties of the left such as the Popular Front and Attayar, published statements, stating their support for the political
campaign, but calling for protestors to refrain from acts of violence.
Besides
mobilization on the streets, “Fech Nstenew” is focussing on a media campaign.
Next to making their demands heard in alternative media, they are defending
their positions against those of the government in TV-confrontations on TV
show.
Tunis. January 2018. Ines Mahmoud. All rights reserved.Hamza
Abidi, who recently defended the positions of “Fech Nstenew” in a televised debate with Mehdi Ben Gharbia, stresses the importance of these
public confrontations with the government on national TV.
What
is different to the initial situation of the uprising 2011, is that on a
political level, Tunisians today have more democratic rights: “Today, we can
appear on TV, express our opinion, protest on the streets and hold political
meetings,” Wards adds.
The
activists however see the attempt of a criminalization of the protesters in the
overt focus on nightly unrest and vandalism, overshadowing peaceful
demonstrations during the day.
Wael
Naouar, activist and founding member of “Fech Nstenew” sees a continuation of
the strategies to discredit the revolution used by the dictatorship of Ben Ali:
“based on a few incidents, the government is trying to criminalize the
protests.” “Every campaign organized by young people in Tunisia is continuously
being confronted with false accusations of destruction and vandalism,” adds
Hamza Abidi.
On
January 10, after protestors had burned down a security building in Thala, near the border to Algeria,
the government deployed the army in Kebeli, Bizert and Sousse to protect
government buildings. Violent clashes as well as
a number of arrests ensued and continued through the night. Among them was Ahmed
Sassi, a philosophy graduate and well-known activist from the student union
UGET. After his arrested in front of his home, activists from “Fech Nstenew”
campaigned for his release and organised a protest in front of the court in
Tunis where he was facing charges of “rioting.” Luckily, he was released two
days later.
Tunis. January 2018. Ines Mahmoud. All rights reserved.On
January 12, the campaign staged its first official national protest. In the
capital, Tunis, protestors held up yellow cards as a warning against the
government, shouting slogans such as “Oh, colonial government, we come here
during the day!” as well as “the people want the overthrow of corruption!” and
“the people want the end of austerity!”
Over the past few years, the
Tunisian government has used the rhetoric of “economic rationale” to pass laws such as the amnesty bill, arguing that it would strengthen
the national economy and enable further foreign investments. However, recent protests show that this argument is not enough anymore and does not
satisfy the masses.
These recent mobilizations show that the impact of political organizing goes beyond
parliamentary parties. They are definitely not to be underestimated.
“Manich
Msamah represents a continuity of social movements in Tunisia. There have been
movements before us and there will be many after us,” says Heythem Guesmi, an
activist of the movement.
“Manich
Msamah managed to bring 15,000 people to the streets. We are accumulating
activist experience, getting to know each other, developing ideas and
strategies and growing together,” adds Hamza Abidi.
Tunis. January 2018. Ines Mahmoud. All rights reserved.The
movement has now started collecting information on the hundreds of protestors
the government has recently imprisoned. They are now preparing a prisoner’s
campaign with the movement “Hassibehom” (“hold them to accouont”), which has been opposing the
police law in Tunisia since 2015.
As
of today, the number of political prisoners has exceeded 800 young women and
men between the ages of 15 and 25. The
activists agree that the goal of the protests is the fulfilment of
socio-economic demands outlined in their initial statement.
Wael
Naouar sees three possible scenarios as an outcome:
One
would be the government being open to dialogue with the people and revising the
new austerity laws. The
second would be the open oppression of protests with curfews and further
arrests, which could seriously hinder the democratic path of the country. The
third would be the government playing deaf, pretending not to hear peoples
demands, which would lead to people demanding its abolishment anew.
Warda
Atig adds that if the government will not start realizing that the recent
protests are not solely unrest the government can soothe by changing its economic policy without bettering the
condition of the working class, the “bread and water and no to Ben Ali” which
people shouted in 2011, will soon become “bread and water and no to
Ennahda and Nidaa.”