A Change of Guard

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Saturday 15 January 2011

Tunisian president fled the country, a lesson for Hun Sen

Zine El Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia (L) and Hun Sen of Cambodia (R)

Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali flees Tunisia as interim president takes control. Mohammed Ghannouchi, the prime minister, declares temporary rule after president is forced out by protests


Friday 14 January 2011
Angelique Chrisafis in Tunis and
Ian Black, Middle East editor
guardian.co.uk

Tunisia's president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali fled his country tonight after weeks of mass protests culminated in a victory for people power over one of the Arab world's most repressive regimes.

Ben Ali was variously reported to be in Malta, France and Saudi Arabia at the end of an extraordinary day which had seen the declaration of a state of emergency, the evacuation of tourists of British and other nationalities, and an earthquake for the authoritarian politics of the Middle East and north Africa.

Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi announced to the country he had taken over as interim president, vowing to respect the constitution and restore stability for Tunisia's 10.5m citizens.

"I call on the sons and daughters of Tunisia, of all political and intellectual persuasions, to unite to allow our beloved country to overcome this difficult period and to return to stability," he said.

But there was confusion among protesters about what will happen next, and concern that Ben Ali might return before elections could be held. "We must remain vigilant," warned an email from the Free Tunis group, monitoring developments to circumvent an official news blackout.

Ben Ali, 74, had been in power since 1987. On Thursday he announced he would not stand for another presidential term in 2014, but Tunisia had been radicalised by the weeks of violence and the killings of scores of demonstrators.

Today in the capital police fired teargas to disperse crowds demanding his immediate resignation. The state of emergency and a 12-hour curfew did little to restore calm. Analysts said the army would be crucial.

Tonight on the streets of Tunis, soldiers were guarding ministries, public buildings and the state TV building. All public meetings were banned, and the security forces were authorised to fire live rounds.

The city's main avenues were deserted except for scores of soldiers. Protesters who had earlier been beaten and clubbed by police in the streets still sheltered in apartment buildings. Army vehicles were stationed outside the interior ministry.

Opposition leader Najib Chebbi, one of Ben Ali's most outspoken critics, captured the sense of historic change. "This is a crucial moment. There is a change of regime under way. Now it's the succession," he told France's i-TELE television news. "It must lead to profound reforms, to reform the law and let the people choose."

Al-Jazeera television, broadcasting the story across an Arab world which has been transfixed by the Tunisian drama, reported that a unnamed member of Ben Ali's wife's family had been detained by security forces at the capital's airport. Hatred of the president's close relatives, symbols of corruption and cronyism, has galvanised the opposition in recent weeks. Tunisians were riveted by revelations of US views of the Ben Ali regime in leaked Wikileaks cables last month.

Ben Ali's western friends, adapting to the sudden change, asked for a peaceful end to the crisis. "We condemn the ongoing violence against civilians in Tunisia, and call on the Tunisian authorities to fulfil the important commitments ... including respect for basic human rights and a process of much-needed political reform," said a White House spokesman.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Traitor and youn that all Rainsy people tools. A bunch of selfish looking for personal interest. No one I ever have found yet he or she truely love Khmer. but 99.9 % are delusive and only trying to make a cheap living by the nam of Khmer compatriot. Many reader they are seem good peoples but KI and Sam group planted dirty disception seed to make them beleived on this Ghost cheater teams, those victime are demonstrator, SRP company activist, oversea peoples....Rainsy and you 6:49 are looking down on those inocents people. Is it your game tools Rainsy? I wonder you are a double agent for Siam!!!! if you did Rainsy, May I ask any one who stay near you put you right off.
I am Mike I wish any people who are speak the truth, will be freinds with me, but not one of those are in politice.

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen should have a hard look at Ben Ali's situation. He has ruled for as long as Hun Sen and has consolidated as much power as Hun Sen, but at the end he was kicked out of power by people's power. Hun Sen should not think that he can rule Cambodia forever. His time will come and he will be judged harshly by history and the people. It is better for him to leave peacefully now, rather than wait until people kick him out. That would be too late to escape.