Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, the man who has been the President of
Tunisia since 1987,
today fled the northern African nation for parts unknown amidst
weeks of unrest over high unemployment and soaring inflation which
has resulted in spikes in food prices. Tunisian Prime Minister
Mohammed Ghannouchi has now taken over as President on an interim
basis.
So what happens next? Will Ghannouchi be able to placate the
populace? Will there be elections? If so then how soon? Of course,
even if elections are conducted in a free and fair manner let us
remember that Tunisia isn’t exactly known for having transparent
institutions or a vibrant civil society. You don’t wipe away
endemic corruption much less cultivate a population that
is unafraid of civic participation overnight. While it is clear
that Ben Ali and his family wore out his welcome with the Tunisian
people it doesn’t necessarily mean what comes after will be an
improvement.
The thing that has caught my attention about the events in
Tunisia is
the support it has received from al
Qaeda. If elections are not held in a timely manner
or if the results of said election are not deemed acceptable by the
new administration an opportunity could present itself for al Qaeda
to assert its influence and impose Sharia law. Should such a
development come to pass then it could have grave implications not
only in the Middle East but for the United States and the
West. We could have an Afghanistan in Africa.
GeronL| 1.14.11 @ 4:19PM
They might have been crooks, but they were the only Moderate Muslim leaders out there!
SJ| 1.15.11 @ 7:15AM
It sucks when people speak out of their butt holes.
You are way off base and obviously pretty oblivious to the facts.
Sad.
Anthony| 1.14.11 @ 5:14PM
Lets not start the Al-Qaeda conspiracy theories now. Tunisia will not turn into another Islamic Republic of Iran.