---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Feb 8, 2011 at 10:53 AM
Subject: There are reasons for rebellion
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*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS
*February 9, 2011

*There are reasons for rebellion
*
By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

It's the nature of politics, domestic and international, that in an
interconnected world, what occurs in one area will sooner or later, directly
or
indirectly, affect other areas.

Having knowledge of what's happening and an understanding of how and why it
is
happening helps one forecast a future trend and avoid the unpleasant  and
the
negative that lies ahead.

But many disregard the compelling desire of men and women to seek freedom,
forget that there can be no lasting peace without the establishment of
broad-based human rights. The 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
contained the warning -- that without the rule of law to protect human
rights,
man has no alternative but to rebel against oppression.

Since the declaration, many rebellions have occurred, many autocracies have
fallen and some forms of democracy have emerged.
**
*Quest for dignity
*

Columnist David Brooks wrote in the Jan. 31 New York Times about a "great
mental  tide" that has swept across the world: People who had accepted
"certain
fixed places in the social order," began to think they must no longer be
ignored, and they march "for responsive government and democracy" --  themes
echoed by protesters in Cairo today.

Brooks presented some lessons learned: Those who tolerate autocrats for the
sake of stability are ill informed; autocracies are more fragile than  any
other
form of government; those who say speeches by outsiders have  no influence
on
places like Egypt have it backward, as it's the climate  of opinion that is
the
basis of the revolt; most countries that have  experienced uprisings end up
better off; though public hunger for  dignity is unabated, the road from
autocracy to democracy is rocky and  perilous; outside powers must help
democrats build governments that  work.

He wrote: "Over the past decades, there has been a tide in the affairs of
men
and  women. People in many places have risked their lives for recognition
and
respect. Governments may lag, and complications will arise, but still they
will
march. And, in the long run, we should be glad they do."

*Revolution

*It's hard to believe that an underprivileged 26-year-old Tunisian street
vendor, who had pushed his wheelbarrow to sell produce since he was 10  in
an
unknown, poor agrarian area, sent an autocratic ruler of 23 years  fleeing
the
country, and unleashed a tsunami of revolutionary fervor  that keeps
dictators
near and far guessing.

He was Mohamed Bouazizi of Tunisia's hardscrabble town of Sidi Bouzid, about
200 miles south of the capital of Tunis. Bouazizi quit high school  to work
full-time to help his mother, uncle and six siblings.

On Dec. 17, 2010, something happened: Faida Hamdy, 45, an inspector,
questioned Bouazizi over a permit. She confiscated his fruit, which Bouazizi
wrestled to get back from Hamdy. She allegedly slapped him in  the face in
public, while two of her colleagues beat him and took away  his electronic
scale.

Embarrassed and angry, Bouazizi went to the municipal building to retrieve
his
wares. There, he was beaten again.

He then walked into the governor's office and asked to see the governor to
lodge his complaint. He reportedly said he would set himself afire
if refused.
An audience was refused.

Bouazizi obtained some bottles of paint thinner, doused and lit himself on
fire on the street in front of the governor's gated office. His
self-immolation
triggered small local riots that spread like wildfire to Tunisia's cities,
including the capital.

Tunisians protested massively against the government for corruption, poor
living
conditions, high unemployment, repression.

Ten days later, President Ben Ali, ruler since 1987, fled Tunis for Saudi
Arabia.

The Tunisian revolt emboldened young people in other countries, such as in
Egypt
today, to proclaim, "Yes, we can, too!"
 *
Deeper problems*
* *
On the surface, Hamdy had done little more than humiliate a man, something
that she may have done at other times. The subsequent "investigation"  found
she
hadn't slapped the vendor. Her brother, Fawzy Hamdy, said he  was thrilled
to be
among the first to join the protests in Sidi Bouzid,  but also said he
didn't
believe his sister had slapped Bouazizi. "It's  the lie that toppled a
dictator," he said.

Sidi Bouzid is a poor town, ignored for years by Tunis. Tunisia's official
unemployment rate is 14 percent, but Sidi Bouzid's is higher than
30 percent,
with rampant corruption, nepotism and cronyism. Sidi Bouzid,  like
neighboring
towns, is home to young, idle, jobless, underemployed  and poor Tunisians,
who
roam the cafes, smoke and play the card game,  "rami." Some intoxicate
themselves with moonshine.

President Ben Ali rarely visited Sidi Bouzid. When he did, local officials
busily  paved roads, planted full-grown trees, painted the youth center and
added skateboard ramps and ping pong tables reserved for "people with
connections."

In the Jan. 30 Washington Post, Sudarsan Raghavan described Tunisia as the
"personal treasure chest" of Ben Ali and wife, Leila Trabelsi, and their
families. For example, Trabelsi was selling a Tunisian island and  shutting
down
a highly regarded private school to promote her own. Ben  Ali's son-in-law
owned
many luxury car dealerships and lucrative  businesses. The Ben Ali and
Trabelsi
families controlled companies and  real estate holdings, "sometimes taken by
force."

As one reflects on that 1948 warning in the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, it seems entirely clear why Tunisia was ripe for revolt. It is
remarkable only that it took so long.

*A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam.
Contact him
at **[email protected]* <[email protected]>*.
*
http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201102090400/OPINION02/102090322





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