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Al Jazeera news report on a "caravan on liberation" that descended on the
capital and prime minister office tpo demand "the whole gang resign". A
woman on the street interviewed says: "This is to show the people and the
whole world that what you see is is a revolution, not an uprising or a coup.
It is a revolution of the poor and the martyrs."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6r1EolMHPBw&feature=player_embedded



Liberation caravan reaches Tunis

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/01/2011123124352723753.html

Hundreds of Tunisians have defied a nighttime curfew and travelled hundreds
of kilometres in what they call a "Liberation caravan" to join protesters in
the country's capital, where anger at the interim government continues to
grow.

The protesters entered the capital, Tunis, on Sunday, tearing through the
barbed wire surrounding the office of Mohamed Ghannouchi, the interim prime
minister, and demanding an end to his government.

The protesters began marching on Saturday night from Menzel Bouzaiane, a
small town in the same province as Sidi Bouzid - the site of the
self-immolation suicide attempt that set off a month of protests and
ultimately ousted former president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

The crowd walked on foot for about 50km before boarding buses to Tunis,
where they arrived on Sunday and began assembling in front of the interior
ministry - the site of many anti-government demonstrations.

*'Security overwhelmed'*

Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from Tunis, said that the security
service outside Ghannouchi's office were "completely overwhelmed".

"They're chanting the same slogan that has echoed across the country - 'Down
with the regime, down with the former party, down with the interim president
and with the prime minister,'" our correspondent said.

"They're saying that the fight will continue for as long as it takes, until
they see a radical change in Tunisia."

Meanwhile, the country's state news agency reported on Sunday that allies
of Ben Ali - Abdelaziz bin Dhia, Ben Ali's spokesman and chief adviser, and
Abdallah Qallal, a former interior minister and head of Tunisia's appointed
upper parliamentary house - had been placed under house arrest.

The agency said police were searching for Abdelwahhab Abdalla, Ben Ali's
political adviser, who has disappeared and that Larbi Nasra, the owner of
Hannibal TV and his son have been arrested on suspicion of "treason" for
working on Ben Ali's return from Saudi Arabia (where the deposed
president currently is currently in exile).

Nasra, the agency reports, is related to Ben Ali's wife, Leila, and while
the channel was taken off the air for about two hours, no official reason
was given for why its transmission was interrupted other than to say that it
was an error.

*PM under pressure*

Al Jazeera's Ayman Mohyeldin said that the fact that protesters - who in
previous days have been joined by police officers and members of the
national guard - have now defied a curfew and poured into the capital from
the countryside is quite significant.

"It shows you that it's not an isolated, handful of people that are leading
these protests," he said,  reporting from Tunis.

"It's people from all different walks of life, from all different parts of
the country."

Our correspondent also reported that Ghannouchi had defended his choice of
ministers, however, in an effort to dampen the anger, Ghannouchi, a former
ally of Ben Ali, pledged to quit politics after elections that he says will
be held as soon as possible.

In an interview on Tunisian television on Friday, Ghannouchi said he would
leave power after a transition phase that leads to legislative and
presidential elections "in the shortest possible timeframe".

Despite resigning his RCD membership, he has been struggling to restore calm
under a new multiparty government that the opposition complains retains too
many members of the party. Fouad Mebazaa, the interim president, also
resigned his RCD membership.

"My role is to bring my country out of this temporary phase and even if I am
nominated I will refuse it and leave politics," Ghannouchi said.

He did not specify when the elections would be held, though the constitution
requires a presidential vote within 60 days.

Ghannouchi also said that all of the assets held abroad by Ben
Ali's government had been frozen and would be returned to Tunisia after an
investigation.

The prime minister also announced that the state would provide compensation
to those who died during the uprising, as well as their families.

The army and the justice department have been ordered to preserve any
documents and evidence that can be gathered during the unrest in order to
investigate the old government, our correspondent said.

*Ban on political groups lifted*

The transitional government has also said that it would lift a ban on
political groups, including the al-Nahda (Renaissance) party.

The exiled leader of the formerly banned party, Rachid al-Ghannouchi, told
Al Jazeera on Saturday that al-Nahda is democratic and should not be feared
and rejected any comparison between him and Iran's late leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini.

"We are a moderate Islamic movement, a democratic movement based on
democratic ideals in ... Islamic culture. Some people pull Khomeini's robe
over me, while I am no Khomeini nor a Shia," he said.

Mohamed Ghannouchi, the interim prime minister - of not relation to Rachid
al-Ghannouchi - has said that the Nahda leader cannot return to Tunisia
until a 1991 prison sentence is lifted.




-- 
“Disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is humanity’s
original virtue. It is through disobedience that progress has been made,
through disobedience and through rebellion.” — Oscar Wilde, Soul of Man
Under Socialism

“The free market is perfectly natural... do you think I am some kind of
dummy?” — Jarvis Cocker
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