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The Arab
Spring hurdles its first test in Tunisia
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by Paolo B. Maligaya, NAMFREL Senior
Operations Associate |
from
NAMFREL Election Monitor Vol.2, No.23 |
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Tunisia successfully held its Constituent
Assembly elections on October 24, its first after the Tunisian
Revolution in March; some say it was the country's first free
election since gaining independence in 1956. Observers hailed the
election as free and fair, peaceful and orderly. The election
commission that organized the polls peg the voter turnout at 90% of
the total 4.1 million registered voters. Campaign started on October
1, and Tunisians overseas got to vote on October 20 to 22 in their
respective embassies and consulates to elect 18 members of the
217-seat Assembly. The Constituent Assembly will be tasked to
appoint a temporary government, and write a new constitution prior
to the planned parliamentary and presidential elections. 11,000
candidates in 27 districts contested the Constituent Assembly
election. |
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Final results show that the
well-organized moderate Islamist
party Ennahda ("Renaissance
Movement") led the polls, winning 90
seats, or 41% of the votes. The
party was banned by deposed
president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali's
secular government, the party seen
as a threat by Tunisia's
predominantly secularist society.
Even during the election, some
members of the party were reportedly
harassed. However, in the lead-up to
the election, the members and
officers of the party stressed that
should they win, they will not
impose fundamentalist values on
society, to assuage the concerns of
Tunisia's secularists and the West.
The performance of Ennahda in this
election is being closely watched
not only by Western governments but
also by neighboring countries.
Ennahda is the second Islamist party
to gain such victory in the region
after the less-moderate Hamas won
the 2006 Palestinian elections. It
might also have a bearing on the
outcome of the series of elections
in Egypt that would start in
December, where the party touted to
win is the Muslim Brotherhood, which
has also raised concerns among
Egyptians as well as Western
countries. In 1991, Islamists won
the election in Algeria, triggering
years of conflict after the results
were annulled by the military.
On October 27, after the final
results were announced, more than
2,000 supporters of the Areedha
Chaabiya party, which placed fourth
in the polls, held a violent protest
in the city of Sidi Bouzid, when the
seats won in the city by said party
were invalidated by the election
commission as penalty for "financial
irregularities." The Constituent
Assembly election was brought about
by the Tunisian Revolution, a wave
of strong protests that started in
December 2010 against the regime
that had been in power for 23 years,
culminating with president Zine El
Abidine Ben Ali resigning and
fleeing the country less than a
month later. |
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The Tunisia protests set off similar demonstrations and unrest in
Egypt, Libya, Bahrain, Syria, Yemen, Morocco, and several other
countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, which
continue to this day, the most recent chapter of which was the
capture and death of Muammar Gaddafi in Libya.
Western media called it the Arab Spring. The Arab Spring is but the
latest in a series of waves of democratization seen in the last
thirty years throughout the world. It started in Asia with the
Philippine People Power revolt in 1986, followed by the June
Democracy Movement in South Korea in 1987, and the less successful
albeit historic revolts such as the 8888 Uprising in Burma in 1988,
and the Tiananmen protests in China in 1989. The Asian revolts
inspired similar uprisings in Europe, starting in 1989 in Poland,
spreading to countries such as Hungary, East Gemany (fall of the
Berlin Wall), Romania, Czechoslovakia (the Velvet Revolution), and
in many other countries, culminating in the
dismantling of the Soviet Union and the overthrow of communist
regimes which continued through the following decade. In the last
decade, a similar wave of peaceful protests succeeded in
overthrowing governments in Eastern Europe following disputed
elections, such as the Rose Revolution of 2003 in Georgia, and the
Orange Revolution of 2004/2005 in the Ukraine. There are others,
like Burma's monk
uprising -- the Saffron Revolution of 2007 -- that, although
unsuccessful in overthrowing a military junta, served as a concrete
reminder that the desire for democracy is alive and resilient.
Revolts and uprisings (peaceful or otherwise) such as the Arab
Spring send a clear message to despots and repressive governments
everywhere that democracy cannot be contained. Freedom always finds
a way. It knows no boundaries such as ethnicity and faith. Change
cannot be prevented by tradition, antiquated laws and systems; we
were witness to the role that technology and social
media played in the success of the revolts, despite limitations
traditionally employed to suppress information. However, the true
test of democracy, after all the euphoria of overcoming what was
deemed impossible has died down, is if the people could sustain it.
Twenty five years after EDSA, the Philippines is still working on
it, not just in ensuring the conduct of free and fair elections, but
in strengthening democratic institutions and ensuring people's
participation in good governance. The Arab Spring countries will
have a tough time ahead, not only in picking up the pieces and
rebuilding their nations, but also in proving that democracy could
indeed thrive and flourish in the context of the Middle East. The
huge participation of people in the Tunisia election indicates that
the people are up for the challenge; this is a good sign and a good
start. Just the same, countries that have gone through the same
experience, such as the Philippines, are encouraged to extend a
helping hand through sharing of experiences and expertise if it is
asked of us, and to reach out to other countries that may be
dreaming of an Arab Spring of their own. |
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