Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November/December
1996, page 76
Tunisia: A Country That Works
Justice Minister Describes Tunisias Battle
Against Islamist Takeover
by Richard H. Curtiss
Tunisian Minister of Justice Sadok Chaabane is a man
with two missions. This author and former professor of law and political
science at the University of Tunis is determined to protect his
Muslim countrys moderate and secular political system from
what he sees as the three outside extremist ideologies that have
swept the Middle East since Tunisia obtained its independence: communism,
pan-Arabism, and Islamism. Although communism never took root in
any Arab country, pan-Arabism is alive if not particularly well
right next door to Tunisia in Libya, and Islamism is the subject
of a bloody guerrilla war in Tunisias other next door neighbor,
Algeria.
The vigorous, prematurely gray government ministers
second mission is to put into perspective charges that Tunisias
current government has abused the human rights of political opponents.
He does this by pointing out the hypocrisy of Western human rights
organizations that have criticized Tunisian measures to curb extremists,
but then ignored similar measures in Western countries to prevent
terrorist acts by those same extremists.
To make his points, Dr. Chaabane cites some key dates
in Tunisias political history since it obtained its independence
from France in 1956. Before 1987, particularly in 1986, there
was a great crisis a true societal crisis, the justice minister
asserts. The fanatic [Tunisias Islamist An Nahda] movement
had undertaken serious preparations to seize power, with a special
focus on Tunisia.
Chaabane maintains that Tunisian Islamists drew their
funding and political support from competing sources that saw Tunisia
as the gateway to its larger neighbors, Algeria and Morocco. These
Islamist sources were Irans Islamic revolutionary government,
representing Shii Islam, and wealthy individuals in Saudi
Arabia, representing Orthodox Sunni Islam. Although Tunisians adhere
to Sunni Islam, the minister said, the Islamist leaders accepted
help wherever they could find it.
Referring to the assumption of presidential powers
on Nov. 7, 1987 from ailing President for Life Habib
Bourguiba by Tunisias former prime minister and current President
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Chaabane asserts: When we say that
Ben Ali saved Tunisia, the word has real meaning. On Nov. 8 Islamists
were planning to assume power. There was a great challenge to save
Tunisia from a current that had infiltrated society and managed
to deceive people. The Islamist movement feeds on social deprivation.
Moving to his second theme, Chaabane continues: What
made matters difficult for us was that the international community
was not convinced of the danger. Now that has changed. What we said
was that there was coordination of efforts and that the Tunisian
Islamists did not want democracy as they claimed, that they wanted
power and that they were extremists.
Therefore we had to take action in the schools,
in the mosques which the Islamists had tried to politicize, and
even the libraries which were filled with their Islamist books.
The newspapers played a role in raising awareness about the danger
of extremists, who also had infiltrated the security apparatus,
the military and the judiciary. The Tunisian approach has focused
on education, job creation and the elimination of poverty through
assistance to the underdeveloped regions of the country. Womens
emancipation and promotion have also been an asset in the fight
against extremism.
Chaabane charges that while the Tunisian government
was engaged in doing all of these things simultaneously with the
transition from Bourguibas long and increasingly arbitrary
rule, some foreign support for the Islamists came from the
human rights organizations. They provided a door through which the
religious movement was able to publicize itself. But we had faith
in our progress, determination, and fighting spirit. We had a national
consensus that enabled us to stand up to this effort.
Ironically, after the Ben Ali government released
An Nahda leader Rashad Ghannouchi, the Islamists again sought to
take over the government, according to Chaabane. In suppressing
this attempt, he said, some abuses took place in 1990 and
1991. But Tunisias leadership never tried to hide those abuses.
President Ben Ali formed an investigative committee and took steps
to punish those responsible and to avoid future violations. The
promotion of the values of human rights has become a basic component
of school curricula and of the training of law-enforcement cadres.
Nevertheless, Chaabane says, Tunisia has never passed
anti-terrorism legislation and has never declared a state of emergency.
In fact, it deals with terrorism by applying ordinary laws,
courts and procedures. Tunisia has honored all of its international
commitments. It submits regular reports to the United Nations, we
receive questions and we respond to them with sincerity, and this
cooperation with the United Nations has borne fruit. All the charges
leveled against Tunisia were studied and investigated in the United
Nations and the findings showed that there are no abuses. We have
nothing to hide.
International criticism of Tunisia centered on two
cases. The first involves Tunisian accusations that its principal
Islamist leader, Ghannouchi, was behind a planned terrorist bombing
campaign aimed at crippling Tunisias tourist industry. A bomb
that exploded in a tourist hotel in the resort city of Monastir
nine years ago severely maimed a British woman guest. Ironically,
Ghannouchi now has been granted political asylum in Britain, from
which he continues to campaign against the Tunisian government,
a paradox that has raised questions in the British press.
A second case was that of Ahmed Kahlaoui, who issued
a pamphlet denouncing PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat and then-Israeli
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. The Tunisian government charged the
pamphlet also called for the killing of Jews. A Tunisian court convicted
Kalaoui of inciting hatred, and he has served a three-year prison
sentence.
In 1993 we proposed a law against dissemination
of fanatic ideology and defining the incitement of hatred as a crime.
Chaabane explains.
This attracted criticism by several human rights
organizations, which considered it interference with freedom of
opinion and opposition. But then the G-7 summit in Lyon adopted
nearly the same approach. The G-7 outlawed organizations fomenting
hatred and the raising of funds for such organizations.
Similarly, Chaabane said, when we asked some
Western governments not to accept Ghannouchi, they said we must
prove that he was directly involved in terrorist actions. It was
not enough that he should foment hatred, or recruit partisans, or
seek funding. All this was not enough. But France today is considering
legislation that is almost a duplicate of the Tunisian legislation.
Discussing the Ghannouchi case, Chaabane charged that
as leader of An Nahda Ghannouchi supervised three branches of the
organization. The first was in charge of Dawa [propagation
of the faith], the second the political branch that tries to accomplish
its goals through peaceful discussion, and the third was a clandestine
security-military branch. But the leadership of the three branches
is a common one, and coordination is complete between them,
the justice minister charges.
As leader, Ghannouchi only gives orders, he
doesnt actually participate in military actions. But the perpetrator
of the bombing in Monastir confessed that his instructions had come
from the hierarchy, meaning that the leader gave the authorization
for this act. The judge found that there were many circumstances
indicating that the leadership was advocating damage to tourists
to damage the economy and to incite the anger of religious leaders
against tourists. Therefore the judgment was not only against the
operatives, but also those who gave the orders.
But the British judiciary decided differently,
the Tunisian minister explains. We have nothing to do with
that, just as we do not want them to interfere with our judiciary.
We believe, however, that European countries which host extremists
should rethink their policies. Fundamentalists have no present and
no future in our midst. Their double-talk and demagoguery can mislead
no one anymore.
The Tunisian governments program to make Tunisian
youth more resistant to outside ideologies like Islamism is to cultivate
a wider awareness of Tunisias own unique history. The area,
which the Greeks and Romans called Afriquiya, a name that eventually
was applied to the entire continent, has a written history covering
more than 3,000 years. In that period Carthage, just north of the
present-day Tunis, became a major power in the Mediterranean world.
That power continued from the era of the Phoenicians, to whom the
Tunisians attribute part of their ancestry, through the Greek, Roman
and Byzantine eras. Even after the Arabs brought Islam to North
Africa, the Fatimids launched their conquest of Egypt from Tunisia.
To increase consciousness among Tunisias youth
of the countrys illustrious history, Dr. Chaabane is the president
of the Hannibal Society, named after the Carthagenian general who
lived from 246 to 183 B.C. and who is best known for the years his
army, which used elephants to transport equipment, campaigned against
Roman forces in Spain, France and Italy itself.
Hannibal is a symbol of the fact that Tunisians
need not look abroad for ideologies, Chaabane explains. The
greatest accomplishment of President Ben Ali has been to break links
with existing movements and allegiances with foreign forces and
organizations which also provide funding and organizational capabilities
with ensuing destruction of the national interest. The Hannibal
Society represents the education of our children and instilling
them with the love of Tunisia, not just as observers but as participants.
We want to establish democratic parties on the Western model where
the parties are competing with concrete projects to serve the interests
of all Tunisians.
Dr. Chaabane, who speaks English as well as French,
was born in 1950 and studied public law and political science in
Tunisia. He earned his Ph.D. in 1975. After teaching at the University
of Tunis he accepted a government appointment in 1988 as an adviser
to President Ben Ali. In that capacity he dealt with political affairs,
human rights, higher education and science before his appointment
as minister of justice in 1992. He is married and has a son and
two daughters.
His book Ben Ali et la Voie Pluraliste en Tunisie
was published by Ceres Editions in Tunis in 1996. An English-language
edition of the book is scheduled for publication in the coming months. |