Tunisians mimic June 30 protests in Egypt
Tunisians have chosen to mark the 10th anniversary of what came to be known as the "Arab Spring" by staging protests against the Ennahda Movement, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in their country.
Protesters took to the
streets to express dissatisfaction with their country's conditions on the
anniversary of the spring.
Some of the protesters
carried placards critical of Ennahda's head Rached
Ghannouchi. They accused him of involvement in the increase of hatred and
violence in Tunisia.
Some of the demonstrators also demonstrated in support of
secular state institutions and against Ennahda's attempts to create a religious
state in their country. They said the secular nature of the Tunisian state was
under threat by Ennahda.
The Tunisian General
Labor Union, the largest union in Tunisia, was at the heart of the
demonstrations. The union had staged protests on December 18, accusing Ennahda
of causing the Tunisian state to derail.
The demonstrators
called for the protection of Tunisians' basic rights. They also chanted against
Ennahda and called for kicking Ghannouchi out of the Tunisian
political scene.
Simulating June 30
The demonstrators
defended secularism and renounced violence.
In this, they copied
the example of millions of Egyptians who took to the streets in June 2013 to
protest against the Muslim Brotherhood as well.
The protests in Egypt
unified Egyptians against this Islamist organization. This was why the military
establishment had to intervene in favor of the majority of the Egyptian public.
In Tunisia, however,
the number of demonstrators on the 2011 revolution anniversary was not large
enough to convince the military establishment to intervene in favor of the
public.
Ennahda jumped into the
Tunisian political scene soon after the 2011 revolution erupted. It made
inroads into the parliament and the government. This is different from the case
of Egypt where the Brotherhood did not have enough time to control all aspects
of the state.



