Disabling utilities to embarrass regime: Tunisian Brotherhood follows in footsteps of Egyptian counterparts
The Brotherhood in Tunisia has
resorted to retribution following the July 25 decisions taken by President Kais
Saied more than three months ago, and while opinion polls reveal the remarkable
popularity that Saied has enjoyed over the past months, those who left the
scene decided to provoke the people to make them angry at the new government
and Saied’s administration, using the low level of services as the most vital
matter for the citizenry and the fastest in impact.
Against this background, the city of
Sfax in central Tunisia was subjected to delays in collecting garbage, as well
as electricity and water cuts, during the past month, which caused citizens
resentment against the defaulting entities.
A trick that
will not fool the citizens
Saied commented on the situation in
a meeting with Prime Minister Najla Bouden, describing the deterioration of the
environmental situation in the Sfax governorate as a crime. He pointed out that
the garbage was deliberately not collected for 25 days, and electricity and
water cuts in some areas were “a despair for citizens.”
Saied said that those who claim to
represent the people, or at least part of them, are trying by all means to turn
the life of citizens into hell, as if they are saying this is what the
revolution brought you.
The president added that those who
resort to accumulating waste and not removing it and opening the paths for mice
and rats are from the same clay, and they compromise the health of citizens and
abuse the people. These methods are well-known and familiar, and they are not
alien to some. The Tunisian people are not fools, so that the source of the
crises they create is not known, because it is a method of maneuvering and
inciting the government, he noted, indicating that they believe that politics
can enable them by all means, but politics are values, principles, and
constancy of values.
Saied added that history will reject
those who pay money abroad to offend their homeland, indicating that those who
resort to this despise them and do not pay attention to them until they have
finished playing with their dogs.
Repeating the
Egyptian scenario
This is almost the same way the
Brotherhood dealt with the situation after its marginalization in Egypt, as the
group resorted to inciting citizens against the state by causing disruption in
vital sectors, including railways, education, electricity and water.
Through these practices, the group bet
on embarrassing the Egyptian administration, but what happened was the
opposite, which prompted it to abandon the vital facilities card.
In order to permanently limit these
events, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi approved in August a law to dismiss
the Brotherhood from their public jobs after it was proven that they were
involved in events that hampered the functioning of their institutions.
In a previous comment in April,
Egyptian Transportation Minister Kamel al-Wazir revealed during a plenary
session of the House of Representatives that there are 162 Brotherhood members
in the railway sector, indicating that they are behind the frequent train
accidents.
“Whenever we ask to transfer them to
another ministry, that ministry refuses, so we demanded legislation to exclude
extremist elements, as the current law does not allow,” Wazir said.
“If they stayed at home and took
their salaries, they would be better, because they are sabotage elements, and
excluding them protects from sabotage operations. Unfortunately, these numbers
increase and are present in the workshops, including drivers,” he added.