• Transition to democracy in Tunisia: Where to? Emna Jeblawi *

    Published for Arab Reform Initiative

    The paper will try to assess Tunisia’s transition and ponder the outcome of the period, as a whole. Before anything else, it is important to approach the issue in the context of the need to resolve the pending questions regarding the fate of the transition itself, and people’s expectations of it. The turmoil we are witnessing today reflects major expectations that have become more urgent than any time before, prompting the need to embark on a process of major reforms.

    Civil Society between politicised action and neutral activism

    The country’s civil society, just like its political society, is in a state of flux. While the political civil society’s role is limited to applying pressure from time to time, joining the political fray could compel it to play the politicised game at the expense of its original role. However, although some civil society organisations and other civil groups, that are good at protesting, have tried to keep an unbiased and neutral discourse during a difficult transitional period, the question remains as to whether they will be able to achieve their objectives despite staying clear

    * Tunisian academic and researcher

    out of politics, which is what professional organisations anxious to avoid being humiliated and co-opted should do.

    To avoid bias and remain neutral, some civil society activists and researchers tried to avoid choosing sides in the wake of the October 2011 elections. The reason is that neutrality, on the one hand, needs a neutral activist who stands on a hilltop, watches what is going on and analyses it objectively and, on the other, should rely on a strong and organised Tunisian civil society that knows well that, in a dictatorship, its responsibilities could become politicised because it might have to use pressure to defend its principles. Civil

    society would be better off if it leaves politics to the politicians during the transitional period and, when only and necessary, take part in the political process, apply pressure here or there, or play the arbiter and the conciliator when it is clear that the political dialogue between the parties is going nowhere. In this context, although the Tunisian General Labour Union has tried to play this role, its proposal regarding the management of the national dialogue took it back to its historical role of playing politics. This could be due to the failure of the political class, until early 2013, to agree on a series of common positions regarding the roadmap that will eventually lead us to stable constitutional institutions, and put an end to the transitional period.

    Human rights and cultural background

    Human rights is a core issue because of its relevance to the constitution and the fact that it is a key demand of the revolution. It is important to draw attention here to the deep historical misconception based on the assumption that the Universal Declaration of Human Right is a Western product, when in fact is it is not. It is worth noting in this context that Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and a number of Islamic non-Arab countries took part of the discussions that culminated in the final draft of the Declaration.

    Not only is it inaccurate to say, as some do, that the notion of human rights is not rooted in our Arab-Islamic culture, it is also outright wrong. The issue has nothing to do with rooting notions here; what threaten the notion of human rights are the mistakes and violations perpetrated by states or international groups that some choose to focus on when they attack the principle. In

    fact, all this unfolds within the framework of an ongoing and natural debate between the logic of force and hegemony and that of international law and justice. Does the failure to protect children’s rights in Niger mean that it is a useless notion and should therefore be replaced by another more purely Nigerian?

    In this day and age, though there is no longer need to reopen the issue of rooting notions in this or that culture, there is indeed a need to start working on reconciling between the Universal Declaration, the Cairo Declaration and the Arab Charter. What remains after that is more serious research on various issues in view of achieving two main objectives: the first is to examine the possibility of reconsidering various reservations, and the second is to make legislations easier to implement by rendering them more compatible with the prevailing mentality.

    The human rights culture is both a demand and asset in the sense that its promotion will guarantee a more stable and less violent future for humanity. It is one of the conditions likely to consolidate Arab societies’ path towards modernity, towards a human rights culture based on international conventions, instruments and charters, and towards more efforts to propel democracy forward. This goes hand in hand with reviving the religious reform movement and finding clear answers to questions that need urgent solutions, especially in light of the contradictory fatwas (religious edicts) by a number of religious currents that could eventually prove confusing to people in the Muslim world, particularly in the Arab world.

    Human rights and the Tunisian constitution

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    Based on what we learned from goings on behind the scene at the committee meetings, it seems that some members close to the so- called democratic current have abandoned an important fight in the battle over principles, namely the precedence of the universal human rights reference over local legislation, though this needs to be confirmed by reviewing the meetings’ minutes. There is so far no guarantee that the principles inherent in the new constitution will be in line with international conventions and charters, and it seems that civil society has to provide a plethora of examples based on various assumptions regarding what could eventually happen, and the problems that might ensue.

    Civil society remains vigilant in monitoring all what is being discussed with the Council in terms of rights and freedoms, and sometimes intervenes in support of amending the wordings of a certain article to make it more compatible with international standards. The positive impact of civil society was clearly noticeable in the general sessions’ final round of voting.

    We need to remind everyone here that modern constitutions help guarantee international conventions and give them precedence over local laws, to make it easier for legislators and officials to align local laws with international standards, and come up with a participatory constitution and a social contract that respects everyone’s rights.

    Remains for civil society, after the new constitution has been ratified, to spread a civil and constitutional culture throughout the country, a culture that helps citizens understand and internalise major principles in the constitution. What good is a pioneering

    constitution that bears the hallmark of legal genius if it does not absorb and reflect the Tunisian people’s expectations, or if the Tunisians themselves do not embrace it? What stakeholders expect the most from civil society in the general debates is to apply pressure in order to:

    - Codify public freedoms in the Constitution;

    - Codify academic rights in the constitution;

    - Codify union rights in the constitution;

    - Codify freedoms, mainly of conscience and the media.

    It is also important to start developing a national methodology and a formula to reform and restructure the judicial and security sectors, launch the transitional justice process and establish independent bodies to take charge, among other, of the media, the judiciary and elections.

    The deepening political polarisation

    If the aim is to make an objective assessment of the general political situation in Tunisia, the first remark should then be about the strong entrenchment of political positions and the divisions that preceded the elections; it was a time during which the country wavered between tense agreement and sharp polarisation. Today, a year after the elections, the country is once again experiencing divisions, centring this time round on a number of issues that change on a weekly basis, this week’s being who will delineate the country’s next roadmap.

    Political divisions began to appear soon after the parties got involved in the post revolution issues in March 2011. Parties were divided

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    into two groups: the December 17 and January 14 Groups, in reference to the date of the beginning of the revolution or the day of its victory. Confrontation ensued between a number of conservatives and advocates of change. There is also a secondary level of polarisation involving a third element, namely the small Salafist Jihadi group. Some limit their political platform to announcing positions and holding onto them, which makes the political dialogue hostage to hard- line positions that are difficult to transcend towards a more mature level of dialogue that allows the parties to acknowledge one another and search for the common ground.

    The political debate remained limited to political parties and politicians, and turned to become no more than a dual argument between the parties involved. In the meantime, the more important element in the equation, the Tunisian citizen, who was supposed to be the most active party, was in fact absent from the scene. In reality, the citizen began to look as if he was in turn hostage to a political class that neither listens nor talks to him, but is content to continue talking to itself. This does not mean that the political class does not care about the public good or the citizens; rather, it shows that it is itself hostage to a new reality that imposes on it the need to restructure itself again, in order for the opposition and the parties in government to graduate from a protest culture to a building culture. We need political parties that are as close to the citizens as they seem to be in the televised debates aired in Tunisia today.

    The dialogue has remained hostage to the so- called “dialogue of positions,” i.e., a dialogue in which the participants do not move

    forward, insist on their positions and accuse each other of causing the problem. This kind of dialogue will not help anyone move forward as long as it remains at the level of “us and them,” at a time when it would be useful to transcend the dialogue of positions to a stage where the stakeholders can think about bringing people together round common principles and interests.

    At a certain stage, it is necessary for this sometimes emotional political dialogue to change, since it often appears in the form of a constricted political discourse that elicits excitement but fails to convince. Observers of the political scene in Tunisia believe that it has become imperative to move from the current angry dialogue to one that thinks collectively about the country needs and those of its people, especially the youth and marginalised groups who were instrumental in launching the protest movement.

    The revolution’s youth and ghosts of the past

    Over and above the political divisions, there is a gap between the youth and the political parties. In an article entitled “Expectations of the Tunisian Constitution a Message to the Youth,” Italian philosopher and professor at the Sorbonne, Giorgio Agamben, referred to how the political elite predominated the process of defining Tunisia’s transition, and believed that it could weaken the active forces’ ability to innovate new ways to manage the next stage. It is obvious that active forces can be found in three pillars: an organised and effective civil society, the youth groups, and the victims of economic, social and cultural marginalisation in the

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    small towns, the countryside and the cities’ peripheries.

    What distinguishes this situation the most is the weak youth representation in the country’s decision-making circles and the fact that some have retreated from public life. This is due to a set of objective reasons, including their limited financial resources, the fact that some are busy looking for a source of income, and a lack of positive new incentives and formulas to attract their interest and involve them more in the country’s political life.

    As an outcome of these divisions, Tunisian citizens find themselves, in front of a political dialogue akin to the dialogue of the deaf. Observers of political life in Tunisia have the impression that what we actually have here is a “society with two heads”. Political parties do not speak the same language, and they operate in a climate rife with political divisions and endless discussions, declarations and statements that give the citizen the impression that we are at a dead end. It appears that the parties and their supporters among different social groups need a translator to help them agree on the rules of the new political game, and this includes both the opposition and the Troika.

    The stalled national dialogue

    There is a gap today between the parties’ behaviour and their election pledges; for example, before the elections all the parties undertook, among other, to defend a civil state and human rights, and not to tamper with Tunisia’s international and other commitments, including those related to human rights. They also undertook to allocate a period of one year, after the elections, for

    finalising the new constitution. However, it looks that the current stage requires more time than expected. They also alluded to the possibility of bringing down the government; yet the stakeholders finally reached a tacit agreement on extending the term of the current government.

    Some analysts say that we adopted a parliamentary system during this transitional stage and that, as a result, the situation was managed in different manner in which the electoral balance played a part.

    So far, the parties have not made any final commitment to the roadmap that will be adopted in the next few months. For despite the initiative of the General Labour Union, and several others including the Troika’s, discussions round ending the debate on the draft constitution are still ongoing. Though this could be acceptable, it requires that a deadline be set for ending the debate, which some say should happen by next spring.

    In August 2012, the parliamentary committees submitted their first draft to the drafting committee to be reviewed both linguistically and legally, to avoid possible redundancies and to prevent one committee from encroaching on the other’s domain of expertise. A second draft was submitted in December 2012 for discussion with civil society organisations in different regions of the country.

    Will there be a Tunisian round-table?

    Today, with the approach of the elections, it is necessary to start preparing to bring the Tunisian people round the same table, this year, for the good of the nation. The case of Bulgaria can be a singular example of the

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    spirit of political harmony and acumen with which the country’s revolutionary groups negotiated with the Marxist forces, against whom the Bulgarian people had risen. At the time, the country’s main parties convened round what was known as “round table,” and several new parties were established including the Socialist Party among whose ranks were members of the old Marxist regime. In 1990, 400 representatives of the Bulgarian people met to discuss and adopt a new constitution, which only 200 members of parliament approved, with the rest remaining outside history, in the eyes of some, because they did opt for the country’s official constitution.

    The role of political mediation

    There should be a neutral party to open and facilitate the channels of communication between the parties involved, away from the outbidding typical of election time. This neutral mediator must enjoy credibility with all the parties, needs to be skilled at managing debates and should take into account different parties’ expectations. He should also know that he who brings people together will be at the receiving end of much criticism. The Bulgarian round table is still the object of debate today because some were dissatisfied with the outcome and the way the debates were managed. The mediator should also remind all the others of the ordinary people’s expectations, namely the middle class and the poor whose lot is getting worse, as well as the youth and those who live on the periphery of large cities, whose feelings of marginalisation are increasing in the absence of tangible indicators that show that their conditions are improving.

    The Tunisian formula or soft management of the transition

    The past period in Tunisia was characterised by the soft management of the state and an absence of core reforms, not to mention the negative repercussions of an over-extended transitional period. Social security in the country is still fragile and there are signs that it is actually becoming more so. What is strange, however, is that the decision-makers took the easy road: they run the daily affairs without introducing any structural reforms or taking politically courageous measures. It is true that those in charge of managing the first transitional period chose to do it this way, which did not make matter any easier for the elected government; still, when it was the latter’s turn to manage the second transitional period, it still did so without taking any strong decisions that indicate that it is serious about introducing fundamental and crucial reforms. The soft management of Tunisia’s transition by the two governments that preceded and followed the elections made the economy even worse, and stoked the people’s ire for failing to launch the reform process.

    Transitional justice or the game of extorting the “old forces”

    The issue of transitional justice is a complex one whose stages and mechanisms cannot be fully addressed in this paper. However, although in the first few months of 2011 people talked candidly about the strongmen and remnants of the old regime, spurred on by an honest revolutionary zeal, the tone rose sharply between April 2011 and today. The

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    political wrangling reached a point whereby different groups outbid and levelled accusations at each other, and caused divisions round the so-called “safeguarding the gains of the revolution law,” which is still the object of fierce debate today. Some of those who worked on Article 15, that banned some old regime officials from taking part in the elections to the Founding Council, expressed doubt on the law’s applicability in light of the chaotic electoral lists, some of which were non-existent while others were simply inaccurate. There is also the fear that this could lure the country into the trap of creating new Tunisian victims or persecuting others, just like the leftist and Islamists were once persecuted, and the possibility of those targeted by this law eventually coming together, and forming a new force to be reckoned with.

    Tunisia’s political society has so far not agreed either on a clear path for the country’s transition or on launching major reforms; this is perhaps due to the fact that many of the unresolved issues that require courageous and candid decisions have not been addressed yet. These issues include the positions vis–à–vis the Bourguiba and “RCD” periods, and vis-a- vis the French colonisation and the ensuing positions that impacted directly on our relationship with the European countries, in general, and our economic partners, in particular.

    If we choose to, we can go back to the precise time at which the revolution’s activists split into two: one group keen on preserving stability and the state’s continuity and advocates soft reforms, and the other calling for a clean break with the former regime. Both groups were sincere and had their

    respective points of view, based on a particular interpretation of the revolution.

    The first group called for continuity because it knows from experience that transitions do not succeed through violence, but through reform and the reintegration of some of the political and financial forces associated, one way or another, with the old regime, some of whom could potentially be unfairly treated in a process of settling accounts. Some call these forces azlam and fulul remnants of the old regime, two harsh and general terms that are inappropriate to use by those who truly understand the conditions necessary for a successful political transition. Successful transition experiences recognised that dictatorships and one-party systems absorbed not only the entire administration but also the country’s entire power structure. Is it possible, with this in mind, to eradicate an entire population or cleanse an entire administration? This totalitarian and idealistic notion reminds us of the Fascist cleansing drive and the French Revolution, which subsequently evolved into a liquidation campaign among the revolutionary forces themselves. Even at that time some spoke about cleansing, a fearful word entirely dissociated from reality and political pragmatism.

    Some observers believe that the delay in introducing major reforms, going back to the first transitional period, was a cautious and wise decision, although it lacked the extra will and determination to start reforming the sectors that needed it the most. The elected government followed that same cautious path. This delay in introducing reforms could mean that the country’s reform formula, especially in the development and economic sectors, has

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    not worked well for the Tunisians. In each of the two transitional periods, various stakeholders threw the responsibility on the shoulders of those who came after them, who were supposed to stay longer in government and operate according to the constitution and through stable institutions. The example of the Polish people is apt here since they adopted significant economic measures immediately after the revolution, thus choosing the path of development over the path of revolution, which could have taken a more radical turn. However, though successful transitions have held to account corrupt high-level individuals in each sector that requires reform, the targeted individuals were few in number, barely exceeding a few dozen. It is appropriate both for us and the political class to remember that it is giving the impression that it is actually extorting the “old guard” by delaying transitional justice, or political generalising it without going into specifics. Today, the Tunisians are in dire need of a transitional justice at the level of their values and ideas; they also need to start working on new texts, similar to those of the October 18 Committee, for a charter that delineates the differences as well as common values. While some cast doubt on the independence state and on the gains of the national state, others see them as a welcome lifeline, though neither offers a pioneering project that looks to the future with new dynamism. They yearn either for the recent or long gone past.

    The period that Tunisia is currently going through is a trial balloon for several indicators, and the Tunisians should understand that it is a period full of confusion due to the increasing complexity of certain

    issues, including the financial corruption and judicial reform files. Are the Tunisians capable of overcoming the difficulties and admitting their failure, if only partially, to manage the transitional period with sufficient determination?

    The trial balloon of the current transitional period, stretching from the elections of October 2011 to finalising the constitution, has revealed the very slow pace with which major reform issues, such as reform of the justice system, are being dealt with. However, this slow pace is due to the fact that the transitional government that led Tunisia to the latest elections has failed to start down the road of reform process. We are not passing judgement here because the period was not long enough to introduce large scale reforms, though there was enough time to draw up the initial broad lines of the process. The slow pace is also due to the complicated reform agenda, and lack of candid political will to start thinking about the mechanisms of reform. The question is, however, is it a matter of political will or a brand of Tunisian “wisdom” that wants reform to happen only when new constitutional institutions are well and truly in place?

    In brief, there is dismemberment and divisions in Tunisia’s political life today, as well as delays in launching the reconciliation process. This is due to a number of complex reasons including the ill-will associated with building a symbolic capital and stoking public opinion’s emotions in this or that directions, in the context of preparing for the upcoming election campaign. There are also delays in launching the process of accountability, on the one hand, and in being frank and open with the people, on the other. These delays

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    have been exhausting to the Tunisian people, despite being perhaps necessary and indicative of the way things are done in our society. Stability is vital for the country’s new constitutional institutions and for the balances of power during the next stage; it is also important that the next elections produce a new crop of legitimate forces in the country.

    The paper has tried to assess the transitional process, in general, and ponder the outcome of the present period. What we came out with is that the situation in Tunisia is still in flux, and wavers between fragility and solidity. 

    http://www.arab-reform.net/sites/default/files/ARB_65_Tunisia_E.Jeblawi_Feb13_Final_Layout_En.pdf


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  • Femmes et jeunesse en quête d’une nouvelle citoyenneté en Tunisie

     

    Emna Jeblaoui

    Professeure à l’université de Tunis la Manouba

    Consultante Nationale au PNUD chargée de coordination d’un projet de centre de formation à l’Assemblée

     

    Je tiens à remercier les organisateurs et la fondation Averroès pour la démocratie et le progrès (FADP) de m’avoir désignée pour la représenter dans cette manifestation.

    Je vais essayer de développer avec vous une réflexion générale sur la situation de la transition en Tunisie en me focalisant sur les phénomènes qui peuvent aider ou bloquer les femmes et la jeunesse dans leur quête d’une nouvelle citoyenneté.

     

    Deux ans après la révolution du 14 janvier 2011, la Tunisie connaît des difficultés sociales économiques politiques et sécuritaires assez sérieuses.

     

    La révolution tunisienne, c’est d’abord un élan populaire dont la vitalité semble contagieuse. Une vitalité déterminée à montrer que la Tunisie est un pays qui mérite un peu plus que le pain et le cirque. Les slogans que les Tunisiens ont érigés ont clairement revendiqué la liberté et la dignité des personnes et du pays. La démocratie revendiquée reste après un peu moins de deux ans, embryonnaire, mais nous savons tous que la transition démocratique est un processus qui peut nécessiter cinq ans ou plus afin de réformer l’appareil du régime totalitaire.

    Mais essayons de comprendre quelques éléments liés aux origines du mouvement contestataire qui remonte au 17 décembre 2010, et qui a été précédé par le mouvement du bassin minier de Gafsa  en 2008.

     

    La révolution tunisienne est une révolution « sans révolutionnaires » sans idéologie, sans héros, sans leadership politique. C’est ce qui fait l’originalité de cet évènement unique et qui a donné en même temps l’impression à la jeunesse désenchantée, aux chômeurs et aux personnes qui se sont soulevées dans les régions marginalisées que le mouvement n’était encadré que par la colère et la détermination des manifestants. Mais une fois apaisé le mouvement de la contestation large, il y eut un sentiment de vide lié au fait que la société civile autonome a été persécutée et empêchée de remplir son rôle. Il en va de même pour les médias indépendants et pour les partis politiques.

     

     

    Mort de Didon, peinture de Boccace, XVe siècle

    Didon se donnant la mort en s’immolant. Un geste de dignité ultime pour ne pas avoir à subir une humiliation, celle de devoir céder son royaume à un adversaire…

     

     

    Le cogito tunisien : Je brule, je me consume donc j’existe

     

    Nous l’avons dit, la nôtre est une révolution sans idéologie, sans héros. L’étincelle qui a déclenché le mouvement de protestation, celle de Bouazizi, était celle du désespoir de citoyens qui ont brulé, qui se sont brulés de désespoir, qui se sont consumés. Les Tunisiens connaissent bien le feu depuis la création de Carthage, la reine Didon, Princesse de Tyr, fondatrice de Carthage. De nombreux textes anciens attribuent la fondation de Carthage à Didon, également appelée Elissa. Sœur du roi de Tyr Pygmalion, elle quitte la Phénicie après le meurtre de son mari perpétré par son frère, relâche à Chypre où elle recrute de nouveaux colons conduits par le grand prêtre, arrive en Afrique, où elle obtient des autochtones la concession d'une terre. Mais le chef libyen qui l’accueille ne tarde pas à exiger de l'épouser ; plutôt que de consentir à cette union, Didon, au cours d'un sacrifice, se jette sur un bûcher et se donne la mort d'un coup de poignard.

    Le suicide est un sacrifice suprême, c’est depuis l’antiquité dans les religions païennes, un moment symbolique fort de sens. L’immolation de sacrifices humains ou animaux était une forme de rite populaire et public qui visait à exorciser le mal de l’assistance… Le sacrifice, l’offrande et le don étaient offerts aux divinités des religions païennes…

     

    De Carthage à la Tunisie du 21ème siècle le mal semble exorcisé par le feu, la dignité retrouvée par l’immolation. Le peuple en colère après la mort de plusieurs jeunes diplômés et chômeurs[1] désespérés, et surtout après la mort de certains protestataires dans les régions marginalisées à Sidi Bouzid, à Tala, à Kasserine a décidé que le sang des Tunisiens est précieux et que « trop c’est trop ». Il a ainsi déterminé à déloger la pieuvre (la piovra) d’un pouvoir à plusieurs ramifications dont la police, la dictature, la corruption et même la criminalité.

    Les chômeurs et les jeunes tunisiens désabusés ont dit NON au système. Un système transformé en mante religieuse meurtrière.

     

    Le désenchantement à effet de domino

     

    La pulsion de mort chez les jeunes tunisiens au chômage était une réaction à des années de marginalisation d’appauvrissement et d’humiliations.

    Les slogans[2] levés par ces mêmes jeunes revendiquaient la dignité, la liberté, la justice sociale. Partis de la marge vers le centre, les mouvements de protestation ont eu un effet de domino sur les régions de la Tunisie, sur le Maghreb, le Machrek et le Moyen-Orient. Ces protestations auront probablement un impact sur les stratégies et les politiques internationales des prochains mois et des prochaines années.

     

    Traumatismes pré et post-révolution 

     

    Après les premiers jours ayant suivi le 14 Janvier[3], il y eut le couvre-feu, les débordements sécuritaires qui ont effrayé la population. Tous les magasins, les banques étaient fermés pendant quelques jours. C’était une atmosphère de guerre, une atmosphère de Fallouja.

    Une pulsion de mort réelle est née dans le pays, cette pulsion était à l’origine des dizaines de suicides par immolation qui ont touché la jeunesse, une des raisons de ce désespoir est l’absence totale de perspectives. Certains avaient détecté en réalité les premiers indices de la crise dans la violence inhabituelle qui a sévi dans les stades de football depuis à peu près deux ans et surtout les derniers mois. La violence du public et de la foule footballistiques était l’indice d’un malaise qui en cachait d’autres, un malaise mal diagnostiqué, mal géré par une classe dirigeante vieillissante de plus en plus isolée de la réalité, une classe dirigeante périmée depuis quelques années.

     

    Juste après le départ du président nous avons retrouvé un peuple traumatisé. Un peuple qui a besoin d’être réconforté, rassuré, accompagné dans cette belle transition démocratique qui a été précédée par de gros traumatismes. Un travail de deuil, un travail de vérité[4] et de réconciliation est à faire.

     

    Justice transitionnelle

     

    La justice transitionnelle peut être un mécanisme juridique exceptionnel qui aide le peuple tunisien à dépasser ses traumatismes… La justice transitionnelle est nécessaire quand on passe d’un état de guerre à un état de paix ou quand on passe d’un état d’absolutisme à un état de démocratie. La dictature est tombée mais pas son système, ni ses mécanismes. La réforme et le démantèlement du système sont un travail qui se fait dans la durée.

    Les morts ne doivent pas être oubliés, la poursuite des responsables doit être engagée dans un processus de justice transitionnelle qui peut être conçu et adapté à la réalité et aux aspirations nationales. Faut-il oublier qu’un enseignant universitaire a été tué à Douz, à savoir le regretté Hatem Bettahar. Les enseignants universitaires veulent savoir qui a tué leur collègue Hatem Bettahar, les personnes attrapées ont certainement parlé, qui sont les responsables directs et indirects des événements de décembre et de janvier derniers ? La responsabilité est à définir dans un processus de vérité, de justice mais aussi de réconciliation.

    Faut-il oublier le journaliste français tué ? Y-a-t-il un recours pour savoir qui sont les responsables ?

    La plupart des Tunisiens se disent : Restons vigilants, perplexes, dubitatifs. Mais désormais les langues déliées ne doivent plus se taire, ils sont fiers de leurs amis, des hommes et des femmes de leur pays.

    Ils se disent : N'oublions pas nos morts, garantissons des procès justes aux corrompus, dénonçons sans relâche les abus.

    Ils disent aux morts et à toutes les victimes du régime de tous genres : nous vous aimons et nous honorons votre mémoire ! Nous n’allons pas oublier ! Les responsables sont à notre avis très embarrassés et veulent avouer leurs tords pour pouvoir construire avec les autres Tunisiens et avec eux-mêmes, nous devons façonner notre voie pour la vérité et la réconciliation pour pouvoir passer de la réflexion à l’action positive et constructive.

    Les Africains du sud ont trouvé leur modèle, les audiences publiques et les assurances ont permis aux coupables d’offrir une réparation matérielle aux victimes et de se racheter sans forcément avoir à subir la prison, mais il a fallu qu’ils reconnaissent en public leurs erreurs et qu’ils disent la vérité sur la corruption et les crimes commis. La vérité est un contrat moral qui les a lié aux autres pour construire l’après Apartheid.

     

    Le vieux continent

     

    Alors qu’Edgar Morin a écrit sur l'espoir tunisien et a fait l’éloge de cet inattendu, la classe politique était moins préparée à accueillir cet élan.

    La surprise de l’occident après le soulèvement des Tunisiens, les balbutiements des politiques et des positions prises à l’égard de ce tournant historique nous montrent que l’Europe -plus que les USA- ne s’attendait pas à cette révolution et qu’elle est encore aujourd’hui troublée par ces changements de donne rapides. Les politiques occidentales ont montré certaines limites ou une vulnérabilité à l’image de la fragilité de leurs alliances ratées avec les vieux dictateurs contre toutes les forces de la jeunesse qui représentent l’avenir de ces pays.

     

    La France n'a pas soutenu le peuple tunisien! Il faut le dire!

     

    C'est donc à l'ombre de la France et plus largement de l'Europe que l'autoritarisme a perduré en Tunisie.

    Pendant la révolte du peuple tunisien, le gouvernement français a montré un soutien sans faille au régime de Ben Ali ! Quelques intellectuels et représentants du peuple français ont exprimé leurs désaccords avec leur gouvernement ! La position de la diplomatie française a été HONTEUSE. Remercions par la même occasion plusieurs Français qui nous ont soutenu cœurs et âmes, et certains médias qui ont pris une position claire assez tôt pendant les évènements.

     

    Le désenchantement de la marge 

     

    C’est une révolution des régions tunisiennes pauvres et marginalisées à l’instar de la révolution bolivienne. Les revendications étaient proches de celles des populations qui se considéraient comme natives indiennes de Bolivie. Ces populations ont obtenu que les multinationales installées dans le pays versent une plus grande part de leurs revenus au trésor public.

     

    Nous assistons là à notre sens à un soulèvement populaire et citoyen contre une forme de libéralisme économique et politique trop arrogants. Le but n’est pas de démanteler le libéralisme mais d’instaurer une meilleure répartition de la richesse et de renforcer le développement et les droits économiques et sociaux du plus grand nombre.

     

    Perspectives au monde arabo-musulman

     

    Ce monde arabo-musulman doit trouver un modèle démocratique citoyen qui peut fonder une cité moderne et universelle, sans ignorer qu’il s’agit d’un croissant culturel à majorité sunnite modéré qui fera l’équilibre avec le croissant chiite et qui respectera les droits fondamentaux des minorités linguistiques, ethniques et religieuses et garantira les libertés et le droit à la différence à tous. Un modèle à la Turque dans les pays arabes, pourquoi pas… La démocratie pourra permettre à ces deux croissants culturels de trouver un pacte démocratique de cohabitation, de voisinage, cela permettra enfin peut-être d’isoler les tendances les plus enclines à la violence.

     

    Le génie tunisien

     

    Les Tunisiens essaient de trouver un pacte citoyen unifié, pour construire leur modèle de démocratie tunisienne, une démocratie qui peut inspirer le voisinage.

    L’originalité de la révolution, la créativité d’un peuple qui a plusieurs fois prouvé son génie au courant de l’histoire nous permet d’aspirer à la construction d’un modèle tunisien pour la transition démocratique. Il est urgent de concevoir, d’imaginer, de rêver un projet, un horizon pour la Tunisie.

    Ce qui manque terriblement dans l’espace citoyen de cette période de construction démocratique après des années de régime où le parti unique a dominé, c’est aussi une histoire construite sur la Tunisie à laquelle aspirent les Tunisiens qui ont refusé la terreur d’une pensée unique fascisante. Nous étions les enfants de l’Etat-providence, de la République indépendante… Mais qui sommes-nous aujourd’hui ? Nous nous sommes définis cet hiver par une négation : Non à la dictature, non à la corruption, non à un discours instructeur irrespectueux, non aux anciens discours qui considèrent les citoyens comme des êtres immatures, pas prêts pour les libertés politiques…

     

    Une partie de la classe politique est balbutiante, vieillissante, même parmi l'opposition. Certains sont de bonne foi, d'autres font des calculs politiciens qui montrent qu’ils pensent plus à leurs intérêts qu'aux citoyens ou à la cité... Tout un peuple a ainsi l’impression d’être parfois voué à une caste malveillante, d’être l’otage d’une opposition qui a trop longtemps côtoyé un régime mafieux. Les politiciens sont dans le calcul, les professeurs dans la vérité,  la plupart des médias dans l’émotion sensationnelle qui décharge les citoyens de la responsabilité alors que l’émotion recherchée doit nous charger de notre responsabilité collective.

     

    Enfin il y a de l’air dans l’air en Tunisie, cette liberté est aussi douce que difficile à gérer, nous devons affronter des défis dont l’expérience de l’adoption de la constitution et la deuxième grande échéance électorale qui semble annoncée pour la fin de 2013 mais qui risque d’avoir lieu au premier semestre de 2014.

    L’animosité et les tensions dans le débat politique guettent la liberté parce que le débat était presque banni de la scène citoyenne. La méfiance des uns envers les autres, l’allergie de certains à la différence, la défiance alimentée par la dictature entre les différents courants sont des maux à exorciser avec beaucoup de délicatesse, une délicatesse qui manque parfois. Les polémiques politiques prennent souvent une tournure assez tendue parce que le dialogue citoyen et démocratique n’était pas un exercice courant en Tunisie… Maximiser la différence maximisera les chances que la volonté démocratique des citoyens soit réalisée.

     

     



    [1] Bouazizi originaire de la ville de Sidi Bouzid, avant lui la mort mystérieuse de Gharsallah originaire de Kairouan dont la famille a reçu le corps carbonisé, Trimech originaire de Monastir.

     

    [2] Avez vous écouté les slogans du peuple qui s’est soulevé, cette vague de colère qui a soulevé mon pays a demandé à ses décideurs du respect ; ils ne l’ont pas montré. « Respectez notre soulèvement » ! « Nous exigeons du respect, créatif ».

     

     

    [3] On n'a pas eu de cesse de chanter pendant 3h de 11h à 14h l'hymne nationale, et de prononcer ce verbe à l’impératif magique et fort « Dégage! ».

     

    [4] Voici un témoignage d’un citoyen terrorisé par le régime : « Nous sommes arrivés à un état de terreur personnellement, j’agissais au sein d’une ONG régionale indépendante, alors j'ai été suivi par ses mouchards. Une femme m'a suivie à Istanbul lors d’un workshop où je représentais cette ONG, elle ne m'a pas quitté.

    Avant le 14 Janvier quelqu’un m'a dit : « calme-toi, tu as un fils, un travail que tu peux perdre ».

    Il exerçait la terreur de la délation, il posait des problèmes aux militants dans leur travail... C’est compliqué, tu n'as pas idée, c'était un système de pieuvre qui nous étouffait... Personnellement j’étais dans leur liste rouge mais j'agissais avec prudence, mon point faible mon fils...J'attendais qu’il pousse et je faisais quand même changer des choses à petites doses. Je pense que les intellectuels indépendants méritent le respect, il les a terrorisés à feu doux. Son système est le plus gros responsable de la castration intellectuelle et politique des citoyens tunisiens. »

     

     


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