[WSIS CS-Plenary] Fwd: The Wrong Man to Promote Democracy
Meryem Marzouki
marzouki at ras.eu.org
Sun Feb 22 13:47:35 GMT 2004
Hi all,
I thought those of you who are preparing their trip to the very nice
Gammarth for the "informal WSIS meeting" might be interested in some
further reading, besides the Lonely Planet Guide recommended by the
WSIS Executive Secretariat. Meryem
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The New York Times
Editorials/Op-Ed
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
The Wrong Man to Promote Democracy
By KAMEL LABIDI
Published: February 21, 2004
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CAIRO ? This week, President Bush played host to President Zine
el-Abidine ben Ali of Tunisia, giving this ruthless autocrat a
long-coveted audience at the White House. To his credit, Mr. Bush
rebuked Mr. ben Ali for his violations of press freedom, but the United
States is sorely mistaken if it believes that democracy and the rule of
law can ever take hold under leaders like Mr. ben Ali. The Bush
administration's welcome of Mr. ben Ali makes America's aggressive
promotion of democratic reform in the Arab world ring hollow.
It's not obvious from Mr. Bush's public statements, but Tunisia today
is one of the world's most efficient police states. Since his ouster of
President Habib Bourguiba in a coup in 1987, Mr. ben Ali has quashed
virtually all dissent and silenced a civil society that once was an
example of vibrancy for North Africa and the neighboring Middle East.
In the early 1990's, the regime cracked down on the country's Islamist
movement, arbitrarily arresting thousands of suspected activists and
subjecting them to torture and unfair trials. Mr. ben Ali then extended
his crackdown to human rights defenders, opposition leaders and
independent journalists. (I, for example, was stripped of my
accreditation after 19 years as a journalist following the publication
of an interview with a human rights advocate.)
Tunisian society is now a shell of its former self; political debate is
relegated to a whisper under the gaze of the omnipresent secret police.
Newspapers are filled with Soviet-style hagiography: Mr. ben Ali is
called the Architect of Change, a title that's hard to accept given
that last year he won a referendum (with more than 99 percent of the
vote) that will allow him to run for a fourth presidential term in 2004
and grant him immunity from prosecution for life. Meanwhile, human
rights advocates have to put up with constant surveillance, the cutting
of their phone lines, anonymous threats, and even attack by thugs for
the regime.
For more than a decade, American policy toward Tunisia has quietly
ignored these excesses, focusing instead on the country's role as
moderate ally in a turbulent region, a supporter of the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process, and a model of relative prosperity
for the Arab world. The Congressional delegations that periodically
visit the country have heaped praise on Mr. ben Ali, with one
congressman a few years back lauding him as a statesman who has "done a
tremendous job in Tunisia and who is well respected back home as well
as here in the Arab world." During his visit to Tunis in December,
Secretary of State Colin Powell gently prodded the government to adopt
"more political pluralism and openness" while expressing admiration for
Mr. ben Ali's leadership skills.
Unfortunately, this muted diplomacy has shown little sign of compelling
illegitimate officials like those in Tunisia to reform themselves.
Without sustained local and international pressure to overhaul the
autocratic political leaderships that dominate the Arab world and to
hold democratic elections, only cosmetic change can be expected.
The United States needs to make it clear to its allies that cracking
down on terrorism can never be an excuse for violating basic human
rights. In Tunisia, however, Mr. ben Ali's Parliament passed an
antiterrorism law in December that would apparently give the regime
more ammunition to attack peaceful critics and prevent the emergence of
a credible political opposition. International human rights groups have
already documented hundreds of cases of political prisoners who, even
though they never advocated violence, have been labeled terrorists by
the regime.
In the end, injustice and political repression pave the way for
terrorism and revenge. The terrorist attack on a synagogue in Djerba in
April 2002, which the state-run press initially presented as an
accident, is a reminder of this. The absence of free speech has also
made extremist clerics on satellite TV stations look like reasonable
alternatives to the government, leading more young Tunisians to the
mosques and more young women to wear the veil.
Despite Mr. ben Ali's oppressive regime, Tunisians still hope that
democracy will take root in their country and that terrorism can be
defeated. It remains to be seen if the world ? and in particular the
United States ? is ready to help make this hope become reality.
Kamel Labidi is a former director of Amnesty International-Tunisia and
former Tunisian correspondent for La Croix, a French daily.
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