Jump to navigation

Tunisia

Parliament backs cabinet reshuffle after a week of protests against inequalities and police brutality

Standoff between the president and prime minister over naming of new minister complicates political crisis

President Kais Saied, who has taken a conciliatory line towards the youthful demonstrators in Tunis and the major cities, is opposing Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi's choice of 11 new ministers to rejuvenate the government. President Saied criticised the choice, lamenting the lack of women and possible conflicts of interest among some nominees (AC Vol 61 No 15, In search of confidence).

The week of protests, which mark a decade since the protests of 2011 drove out President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, are prompting concern among political leaders that the country's democratic institutions could be broken by another uprising (AC Vol 61 No 7, The spring unsprung). Many of the protestors target their rage against Prime Minister Mechichi, who has described them as hoodlums.

A succession of weak governments: eight prime ministers in the 10 years since the toppling of Ben Ali, combined with a stagnant economy has resulted in falling voter turn-out at successive elections. But there now appears to be a strong possibility that the protests against rising poverty and unemployment could spin out of control.

Economic forecasts for the medium term are bleak. Repayments on a $2.9 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund will come due in the coming months and the economy has been badly hit by the Covid-19 pandemic. Output in 2020 fell by 7% following several years of slow growth.



Related Articles

In search of confidence

Elyes Fakhfakh, Tunisia's prime minister for less than five months, has been forced to resign over allegations that he owned shares in companies that won state contracts.


The spring unsprung

The fifth most infected country in Africa, Tunisia is also the only relative success story of the 2011 Arab Spring, but there are fears that the coronavirus could...


Out of contract

On the face of it, it is just another lucrative lobbying deal, with Israeli arms dealer turned lobbyist Ari Ben Menashe bagging another US$1 million contract to add...


Moncef Marzouki

President, Tunisia

On 31 May, Tunisia hosted the fifth China-Arab Cooperation Forum in Hammamet. For China’s Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, it was the first such meeting since the Arab Spring...


Unions and oppositionists warn of a social explosion

Widespread food and fuel shortages are driving anger on the streets as President Saïed focuses on his authoritarian political project

As police clashed with protestors in Tunis over the weekend of 15-16 October, the IMF announced that it had reached provisional agreement with President Kaïs Saïed's government for...