Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

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Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
زين العابدين بن علي
Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

Incumbent
Assumed office 
07 November 1987
Prime Minister Hédi Baccouche
Hamed Karoui
Mohamed Ghannouchi
Preceded by Habib Bourguiba

In office
02 October 1987 – 07 November 1987
President Habib Bourguiba
Preceded by Rachid Sfar
Succeeded by Hédi Baccouche

Born 9 September 1936 (1936-09-09) (age 71)
Hammam-Sousse, Flag of Tunisia Tunisia
Political party RDC

General Zine El Abidine Ben Ali (زين العابدين بن علي), born in Hammam-Sousse on 3 September 1936), has been the President of the Tunisian Republic since 7 November 1987, only the second one since its independence from France on 20 March 1956.

Contents

[edit] Government appointment

Ben Ali was appointed to establish and manage the Defense Ministry's Military Security in 1964, which he ran until 1974. He was promoted to director-general of National Security at the Ministry of the Interior in 1977 after serving as military attaché to the Kingdom of Morocco. He returned from four years as Ambassador to Poland to become once again head of National Security at the Ministry of the Interior but this time with Cabinet rank. Many disappearances deaths and torture cases were reported to the human rights organisations. For his success in dealing with the political opponents and their threat to the regime, he was promoted to Minister of the Interior, and retained this position until he was appointed Prime Minister.

Ben Ali was appointed Prime Minister and constitutional successor by President Habib Bourguiba on 1 October, 1987. Five weeks after becoming head of the government, he had President Bourguiba declared medically unfit for the duties of the office and assumed the presidency on 7 November, 1987. The constitutional destitution of President Bourguiba was popular and legitimately based on Article 57, that allowed the procedure; the political life of the country having been deadlocked in an unending presidential succession debate and political crisis, cronyism and economic stagnation.

He then retained his predecessor's pro-western foreign policy and supported the economy which has been growing since the early 1990s. Growth in 2002 slowed to a 15-year low of 1.9% due to drought and lackluster tourism. Better conditions after 2003 have helped push growth to about 5% of GDP. Privatization, increasing foreign investment, improvements in government efficiency and reduction of the trade deficit are challenges for the future.[1]

[edit] Work as President

Ben Ali's Democratic Constitutional Rally (formerly Neo-Destour party) continues to dominate the national politics. In 1999, although two alternative candidates were permitted for the first time to stand in the presidential elections, Ben Ali was reelected with 99.66% of the vote. He was again reelected on 24 October 2004, officially taking 94.48% of the vote, after a controversial constitutional referendum in 2002 which allowed him to seek reelection.

In March 2002 Ben Ali called for the United Nations to setup a 'World Solidarity Fund',[2] modelled on Tunisia's own solidarity fund.[3]

Freedom of the press is officially guaranteed and condoned. However, human rights organization Reporters Sans Frontieres states that "Tunisians have no access to independent news in the local media and the press, radio, TV and the Internet is under the president’s control. Journalists and media are actively discouraged from being more independent by means of bureaucratic harassment, advertising boycotts and police violence."[4]

Many political prisoners remain in jails or in exile in and out of the country. Many disappearances, deaths and torture cases were reported to the human rights organisations. Many arrests are a result of individuals venturing into the internet to bypass government propaganda and controlled press.[5] Ben Ali introduced a law that exonerate him from future prosecution and thus gave himself an amnesty.

[edit] Family

Ben Ali was first married to Naima Kefi, the daughter of General Kefi, Tunisia's first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and had three daughters (Ghazwa, Dorsaf and Cyrine); he divorced her in 1992 and married Leila Trabelsi, whom he met when he was President Habib Bourguiba's minister of the Interior. With her, he has two daughters (Nessrine and Halima) and a son (Mohamed Zine El Abidine) (source: Encyclopedia of the Orient at [1]).

On its Jan/Feb issue of 2008, the Foreign Policy Magazine reported that Tunisia's First Lady has been using the 737 Boeing Business Jet[6]of the government to make "unofficial visits" to European Fashion Capitals, as Milan, Paris and Geneve. The report says the trips are not on the official travel itinerary. Bloggers tracked the official airplane on spotting webpages as Airliners.net. The first lady is known to be a shopaholic.[7] [8]

[edit] Suppression of Muslim dress

Tunisia banned Muslim women from wearing headscarves in public places. Recently, this ban has been intensified, with police stopping women on streets, asking them to remove the headscarf and sign an affidavit stating that they will never wear it again.[9]

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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Political offices
Preceded by
Habib Bourguiba
President of Tunisia
1987 – present
Incumbent
Preceded by
Rachid Sfar
Prime Minister of Tunisia
1987
Succeeded by
Hédi Baccouche