New cabinet in bid to get Tunisia out of its economic mess
The new Tunisian government, headed by Najla Bouden, has already started assuming its mission by trying to handle the North African country's economic crisis.
The branch of the Muslim Brotherhood
in Tunisia works hard, meanwhile, to impede the government's attempts to
address Tunisian problems.
The Ennahda movement, the political
arm of the Brotherhood, predicts the failure of the government in its mission.
Director-General of Finance and
External Payments at the Central Bank of Tunisia, Abdelkarim Lassoud, has revealed
what he described as 'advanced' talks with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates to support Tunisia's financial resources.
Crisis limits
Tunisia lags behind other Arab
countries in terms of the economy.
The country's financial crisis dates
back the 2010 popular uprising against late autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Those rising up against Ben Ali
demanded a decent life and better living conditions.
Following Ben Ali's downfall, some
of the country's political forces made a political rise and lavished promises
on the Tunisian people. Almost ten years later, these forces remain to have
given the people nothing but lip service.
Instead of improving the Tunisians'
living conditions, the same political forces polarized Tunisia and kept
fiddling against each other.
By doing so, the same forces largely
marginalized Tunisia's economic woes.
Ordinary Tunisians find themselves
moving from bad to worse, which causes them to return to the streets to make
the same demands they made in 2010, namely a decent life and better living
conditions.
Tunisian President, Kais Saied,
countered all this by dissolving on July 25 the Tunisian parliament and sacking
the cabinet.
Now, the Tunisians pin a lot of hope
on the new government to get their country out of the economic mess in which it
has been mired for over a decade.
They also blame their country's
political forces for causing this mess.