Thursday, August 2, 2018

'Arab Spring' Yesterday and Today: The Tunisian Template


'Arab Spring' Yesterday and Today: The Tunisian Template

by Tommaso Virgili  •  August 2, 2018 at 5:00 am
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  • A crucial recommendation of the report by Tunisia's Individual Freedoms and Equality Committee (COLIBE) is a call explicitly to define the country's vague criminal clauses that refer to 'public order' and 'morals.'
  • The calls to decriminalize homosexuality and blasphemy, and to equalize the inheritance rights of women with men, are opposed by political parties that claim to be post-Islamist but in practice kowtow to Islamic fundamentalists.
  • Now it is time for hesitant secular forces in Tunisia's parliament to embrace and implement COLIBE's recommendations.
  • And in the rest of the Muslim world?
Tunisian President Béji Caïd Essebsi established the Individual Freedoms and Equality Committee in August 2017 to prepare a project of reforms that are unprecedented in the Arab world. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
As the world begins to understand what happened in the 'Arab Spring' that began in December 2010—and its ramifications today—the place where it was sparked is both a map and compass. Where did the movement come from and where is it going?
Of all the countries that took part in the Arab Spring, Tunisia is the one that most deserves the appellation 'free.'
But it is not quite there yet. This North African nation still has a long way to go. Its entrenched cultural and religious taboos are making the transition to true freedom a complicated process.
One indication of the challenges faced by the inheritors of Arab Spring is a recent report by the Individual Freedoms and Equality Committee, known by the acronym COLIBE.
Established in August 2017 by Tunisian President Béji Caïd Essebsi, the purpose of COLIBE is "the preparation of a reform project in accordance with the requirements of the Tunisian Constitution of 2014 and international human rights standards".
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