Tunisians receive Nobel Peace Prize amid state of emergency

The Nobel Committee wanted to showcase Tunisia as a rare success story to emerge from the Arab Spring

Nobel Peace Prize
Nobel Peace Prize. Photo: WIkipedia
AFPPTI Oslo
Last Updated : Dec 08 2015 | 1:25 PM IST
The Nobel Peace Prize will be awarded on Thursday to four civil society groups who led Tunisia's transition to democracy, though the country has now been plunged into a state of emergency as it battles the threat of jihadism.

After a suicide attack on a bus belonging to the president's security entourage that killed 12 people on November 24, authorities enforced a night-time curfew in Tunis, temporarily closed the Libyan border, and announced a state of emergency -- for the second time this year.

These developments illustrate just how fragile the country's prizewinning democracy process is.

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In honouring the National Dialogue Quartet, the Norwegian Nobel Committee wanted to shine the spotlight on Tunisia as a rare success story to emerge from the Arab Spring, the movement of popular uprisings that started in the country.

Formed in 2013 when the process of democratisation was in danger of collapsing because of widespread social unrest, the quartet established an alternative, peaceful political process as Tunisia was on the brink of civil war.

It is made up of the Tunisian General Labour Union (UGTT), the Confederation of Industry, Trade and Handicrafts (UTICA), the Human Rights League and the Order of Lawyers.

While the wave of Arab Spring uprisings has led to chaos in neighbouring Libya, Yemen and Syria, and to the return of repression in Egypt, Tunisia adopted a new constitution in January 2014 and held democratic elections at the end of last year.

The Tunisian example has demonstrated that "Islamist and secular political movements can work together to achieve significant results in the country's best interests", Nobel committee chief Kaci Kullmann Five said after the prize was announced on October 9.

Almost five years after the ousting of dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, the threat of jihadism hangs heavily over Tunisia.

Two other major attacks had rocked the country before last month's bombing of the presidential guard bus, for which the Islamic State group (IS) claimed responsibility.

In March, 22 people were killed at the Bardo Museum in Tunis and 38 tourists were killed in a beach resort massacre in June.

Last month, a group claiming to be part of IS also slit the throat of a 16-year-old shepherd they accused of being an informant for authorities.

And last week, the interior ministry announced the arrest of two jihadists suspected of planning suicide attacks.

A UN working group has meanwhile estimated at 5,500 the number of Tunisians who have left to fight in Syria, Iraq and Libya, making the country one of the biggest jihadist breeding grounds.
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First Published: Dec 08 2015 | 11:13 AM IST

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