iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Tunisia Elections 2011: Voters Turn Out For First Free Vote

Tunisia First Free Elections

PAUL SCHEMM   10/23/11 08:09 PM ET   AP

TUNIS, Tunisia — The people who started the Arab Spring shared one of its earliest fruits on Sunday: a free election. Tunisians who brought down a dictator nine months ago waited for hours to select those who will help shape their fledgling democracy.

"The old elections were fraudulent and this one is for our children and grandchildren so that even if I soon die, I will be happy and content," said Tayyib Awish, resplendent in a crisp white robe and skull cap at a crowded school-cum-polling station in the working class suburb of Hay al-Tadammon near Tunis, the capital.

The spry 83-year-old voted many times for Tunisia's first two presidents in contests whose results were always known ahead of time, but this time was different. "This is a celebration," he said, gesturing with a finger stained blue by polling station ink.

Women with headscarves and without, former political prisoners and young people whose Facebook posts helped fuel the revolution also were among those electing a 217-seat assembly that will appoint a new government and then write a new constitution.

It was the first truly free election in the history of Tunisia, which was under the control of President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali for 23 years. Ben Ali was overthrown Jan. 14 by a monthlong uprising, sparked by a fruitseller who set himself on fire in protest of police harassment, then stirred by anger over unemployment, corruption and repression.

The uprising inspired similar rebellions across the Arab world. The autocratic rulers of Egypt and Libya have fallen since, but Tunisia is the first country to hold free elections as a result of the upheaval. Egypt's parliamentary election is set for next month.

President Barack Obama offered congratulations, saying that "less than a year after they inspired the world, the Tunisian people took an important step forward."

The party expected to come out on top is the moderate Islamic movement Ennahda, or renaissance, though no one party is expected to win a majority of assembly seats. An Ennahda victory, especially in a comparatively secular society like Tunisia, could have wide implications for similar religious parties in the region.

Preliminary reports indicate voting went smoothly, with up to 70 percent of registered voters turning up at polling stations. Results might not come until Monday or Tuesday.

People waited in line for hours to vote under the strong North African sun.

"Even if I have to stand in line 24 hours, I would not give up the chance to savor this air of freedom," said former political prisoner Touhami Sakouhi, also voting in Hay al-Tadammon.

In the more affluent Tunis suburb of al-Aouina, 18-year-old language student and former protester Zeinab Souayah said, "I'm going to grow up and think back on these days and tell my children about them."

"It feels great, it's awesome," she added, in English.

Ben Ali's regime was among the Middle East's most corrupt and repressive, and his long-calm country was shocked by the self-immolations at the start of the uprising and the ensuing outbursts of pent-up anger. As protests spread across Tunisia, the police crackdown left more than 300 dead.

Protests have simmered in the months since, periodically ending in violence, but Tunisia's interim authorities have generally managed to contain the unrest – and keep the months of war in neighboring Libya from spilling over their common border.

The atmosphere on this extraordinary voting day was electric with excitement, but to the relief of many, not violent. Kamel Jendoubi, the head of the election commission, said there were only some scattered election violations, such as campaigning near polling stations or trying to influence voters. Some parties had received warnings, but he did not name them.

The ballot was an extra-large piece of paper bearing the names and symbols of the parties fielding a candidate in each district. The symbols are meant to aid the illiterate, estimated at about 25 percent of the population in a country with one of the region's most educated populations.

Voters in each of the country's 33 districts, six of which are abroad, had roughly 40 to 80 ballot choices. It was a cacophony of options in a country effectively under one-party rule since independence from France in 1956.

Retired engineer Bahri Mohamed Lebid, 73, said he voted "for my religion," a sentiment common among supporters of the Ennahda movement. He said he last tried to vote in 1974, when polling officers forced him to cast a ballot for the ruling party despite his objections.

Ennahda believes that Islam should be the reference point for the country's system and laws and believes that democracy is the best system to maintain people's rights. It has also said it supports Tunisia's liberal laws promoting women's equality – making it much more progressive than other Islamic movements in the Middle East.

Some voters expressed concern that despite its moderate public line, Ennahda could reverse some of Tunisia's progressive legislation for women if it gains power.

"I am looking for someone to protect the place of women in Tunisia," said 34-year-old Amina Helmi, her hair free of the headscarves that some Tunisian women wear. She said she was "afraid" of Ennahda and voted for the center-left PDP party, the strongest legal opposition movement under Ben Ali.

There are 7.5 million potential voters, though only 4.4 million of them, or just under 60 percent, are actually registered. People can vote with their identity cards but only at certain stations, which caused some confusion.

Mogadi Shukri, 43, a day laborer, said that since he hadn't registered he had to go to a far-away station to vote. "I feeling like am missing out," he said sadly.

A proportional representation system will likely mean that no political party will dominate the assembly, which is expected to be divided roughly among centrist parties, leftist parties and Ennahda. They will need to form coalitions and make compromises to create a constitution.

According to the international election commission running the elections, there were more than 14,000 local and international observers watching polling stations, including delegations from the European Union and the Carter Center.

Many have expressed indifference about the elections out of frustration that life has not improved since the revolution. Tunisia's economy and employment, part of the reason for the revolution in the first place, has only gotten worse since Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia because tourists and foreign investors have stayed away.

Outside the school-turned-polling station in Hay al-Tadammon, a group of young men sat on the street, sipping tea and mocking journalists who were talking to people who had just voted.

Belhussein al-Maliki, 27, said he fought in the January uprising, which engulfed this downtrodden suburb, and lost a relative in the fighting.

"We are jobless, we have nothing and we won't vote," he said bitterly. "Everything is the same, the world is the way it is, and the world will stay the way it is."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

TUNIS, Tunisia — The people who started the Arab Spring shared one of its earliest fruits on Sunday: a free election. Tunisians who brought down a dictator nine months ago waited for hours to se...
TUNIS, Tunisia — The people who started the Arab Spring shared one of its earliest fruits on Sunday: a free election. Tunisians who brought down a dictator nine months ago waited for hours to se...
Filed by Clare Richardson  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 17
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
06:59 PM on 10/25/2011
Most likely it will be Sharia law and the country will have another dictatorship under religion. Islam, sharia law and democratic government is not a good mix. The Arab spring will just be another Arab fail. How can you have Sharia law if there are non Muslims living in the country. That's the whole point, isn't it?
08:58 AM on 10/24/2011
Free Elections, My Foot..IF the U.S.A...has their hand in it..ITS Already Corrupt..
07:01 PM on 10/25/2011
The elections are being monitored so that the people have the right to elect religious leaders who will make it a theocracy. Democracy goes out the window.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ejay579
MURKA! Numba one 4 EVA!
08:39 AM on 10/24/2011
It is only a matter of time before the Islamic fundamentalist take over this country.
09:00 AM on 10/24/2011
They ARE already doing it...Their Chief is in the White House
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ejay579
MURKA! Numba one 4 EVA!
11:07 AM on 10/28/2011
Knucklehead, by "this country" I meant Tunisia. Do they have a White House?
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
08:10 AM on 10/24/2011
If any nation will benefit from Arab Spring, it will be Tunisia. They will build a successful democracy.
09:01 AM on 10/24/2011
A Successful Dictatorship, I think You Mean
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
09:23 AM on 10/24/2011
With the relative stability and prosperity in Tunisia and Libya, it seems they had a somewhat successful dictatorship. The dictators are gone now, and it is in the hands of the people
07:02 PM on 10/25/2011
The Arabs will never build a democracy. Arab spring is Arab fail.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PoliticallyAffiliated
Be the change you wish to see in the world.
03:38 AM on 10/24/2011
Can't wait to see Egypt have some elections.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PatrickforO
America needs a Labor Party
01:57 AM on 10/24/2011
We'll see how free the election really was when the results are announced. If we then see a government that works on education, housing, water and developing its small business base, then we've seen a free election. If, on the other hand, we see capital flight, the rise of a small but very rich upper class and declines in wages for the rest, then we've seen a rigged election.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard Pearce banned
Never let them tell you it can't be done.
05:39 AM on 10/24/2011
Of course, if the new Tunisian government does indeed work on education, housing, water, and developing its small middle class into a large one, you'll see that capital flight, rather than with the rise of a small but very rich upper class and declines in wages for the rest.

And, if it adopts a foreign policy platform that clashes too often with America's one, well, then we will indeed be hearing a lot about a rigged election
09:02 AM on 10/24/2011
Bet On It..With the Dirty Hands of the USA in it to our Elbows
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:27 PM on 10/23/2011
I have friends in Tunis, they would argue this couch potato fox news story.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gevan
big dubya
11:02 PM on 10/23/2011
"Everything is the same, the world is the way it is, and the world will stay the way it is."
Actually, the world changes. How it changes may seem beyond our means to influence, but in some small way the individual does have an effect. Especially when combined with other individuals in some organized way...
10:48 PM on 10/23/2011
it will be great if those two young Men find a job so they can have more hope