Originally published February 13, 2011 at 8:23 PM | Page modified February 14, 2011 at 8:59 AM
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After revolution, Tunisians now waiting for stability
A month after Tunisians toppled their authoritarian president, sending shock waves across the Arab world, many are discovering that may have been the easy part.
The New York Times
Related developments
Italy reacts to refugees: Italy's interior Minister Roberto Maroni said Sunday that the country hoped to send its armed forces to Tunisia to help stem the flow of illegal immigrants after more than 3,000 Tunisians fleeing unrest there arrived by boat on Lampedusa, a small Italian island closer to Tunisia than the Italian mainland, in recent days.Yemen protest: In a third day of demonstrations, young protesters in Yemen were beaten back and some injured by security forces Sunday after marching on the presidential palace in Sana'a, witnesses said. Established opposition groups who had organized previous demonstrations that forced President Ali Abdullah Saleh to promise he would relinquish power in 2013, did not join the march Sunday by groups that called for his immediate ouster.
Algerians call for rallies: The organizers of a pro-reform protest that brought thousands of Algerians onto the streets of the capital over the weekend called Sunday for another rally Feb. 15. Saturday's rally — which came a day after an uprising in Egypt toppled that country's autocratic ruler — took place only in the capital, Algiers. The hours-long rally dissolved peacefully Saturday afternoon, and Sunday was calm in the capital, though youths clashed with riot police in Annaba after thousands responded Sunday to a local newspaper ad announcing jobs at city hall, only to learn there were no jobs.
Bahrain protest planned: In Bahrain, where a Sunni ruling family governs a Shiite majority, Monday has been declared a "Day of Rage" by protesters, who are demanding the release of political prisoners, an end to torture and reform of the judicial system. Security forces set up checkpoints and clashed with marchers in at least one village Sunday as opposition groups used social-media sites to call for the first major anti-government protests in the Gulf since the uprising in Egypt. The kingdom is the home to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.
Other protests scheduled: Protesters in other Arab countries have called for protests, including Libya (Feb. 17), Morocco (Feb. 20.), Cameroon (Feb. 23), and Kuwait (March 8).
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TUNIS, Tunisia — Bakers have threatened to stop making baguettes unless their salaries are increased. Lawyers demanding judicial independence protested outside the Justice Ministry. Unemployed miners slept in the halls of the headquarters of a phosphate-mining company, demanding more jobs.
A month after Tunisians toppled their authoritarian president, sending shock waves across the Arab world, many are discovering that may have been the easy part.
With restrictions on the media lifted and freedom of speech flourishing, the cork has popped on years of bottled-up demands over salaries, working conditions and other grievances.
Tunisians seem torn between a desire to fully eradicate the remnants of the previous government and a pining for stability.
Even as a fragile caretaker government begins the daunting task of rewriting the constitution and preparing for elections still months away, it faces a crush of immediate demands for jobs, economic improvement and security. The challenges of balancing revolutionary ideals with bread-and-butter issues may provide a glimpse of what lies ahead for Egyptians as their political transition unfolds.
"We are only starting now to think about the future," said Mahmoud Ben Romdhane, a former university professor who heads the Mouvement Ettajdid, or Renewal Movement, a left-leaning political party. The danger, he said, is that "the revolutionary dynamic can go on forever."
On Sunday, as sanitation workers cleaned up piles of garbage that had accumulated during several days of strikes, Foreign Minister Ahmed Ounaiss resigned after his staff refused to work with him. Ounaiss "was not worthy of the revolution," one Foreign Ministry official was quoted as saying.
Among other perceived transgressions, Ounaiss had reportedly refused to refer to last month's events as a "revolution."
At least 219 people were killed during the protests that led to the ouster of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, a U.N. investigation found. Before he fled into exile in Saudi Arabia on Jan. 14, he had ruled for 23 years.
The government has appointed a commission to draft a constitution and says it expects to hold elections in five or six months.
Politicians banned under the old government, many of them Islamists, have been steadily arriving from European capitals where they lived in exile. The role of Islamism in the new order remains an open question in what has been a relatively secular society.
Dreams of a more inclusive political system are intertwined with the desire for more and better jobs, a difficult wish to fulfill at the best of times, let alone during a tumultuous political transition.
The same groups of young people who last month swarmed the streets shouting, "Get Out!" gathered Saturday evening with a new chant: "Unemployed!"
"The unemployed gained nothing from the revolution," said Hamdi Tarek, 29, who works sporadically hawking vegetables and clothing on the streets of Tunis, the capital. "We're still waiting. We are waiting for work."
The Tunisian economy has been one of the most competitive in the Arab world, and Tunisia's finances are relatively sound. The official unemployment rate is 14 percent, but it is estimated to be as high as 30 percent in the impoverished and restive hinterland, where the upheaval began with the self-immolation of a fruit vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi, after a fight with a local official.
His suicide, the symbol of daily humiliations and petty corruption by low-level officials, was the catalyst for protests that spread from the countryside to the capital and then on to Egypt and across the Arab world.
Today, the caretaker government is facing a power vacuum in the less-developed areas inland. Governors from the old government were fired, but new ones have yet to be appointed.
In the weeks since Ben Ali fled, protesters have clashed with the police in several provincial cities, leaving at least two people dead.
The Tunisian news media have reported that some of the violence was provoked by elements of the ancien regime seeking to undermine the new government and justify a return to dictatorship. Last week the government called up military reservists to help maintain order.
In Tunis, too, fears of the lack of government have taken hold. The police force is understaffed because officers are refusing to show up, in some cases out of fear of popular resentment of their role as guardians of the previous government.
"This is not democracy; this is disorder," said Hamdouni, a saleswoman at a cellphone shop who gave only one name. "We are all waiting for the return of order."
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