Struggling Tunisia unity cabinet to meet

TUNIS, (Reuters) – Tunisia’s caretaker prime minister  aims to gather his national unity cabinet for a first meeting today, but he already faces revolt from opposition nominees  demanding he fire more of the ousted strongman’s allies.

Within a day of Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi appointing  several opponents of former president Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali,  four of them quit his new government, saying street protesters  who triggered the upheaval were disappointed at how many of the  old guard, including Ghannouchi himself, were still in power.

Abid al-Briki of the UGTT trade union, whose three  ministerial nominees all resigned, said it still wanted to see  all ministers from Ben Ali’s old team cleared out, though it  would make an exception for Ghannouchi. “This is in response to  the demands of people on the streets,” Briki said.

Trying to defuse the row, Ghannouchi and caretaker President  Fouad Mebazza quit the Democratic Constitutional Rally (RCD) —  until this week the party vehicle for Ben Ali’s strongman rule.

One of the rebel new ministers, Mustafa Ben Jaafar,  indicated that move might be enough to tempt him back.

But the UGTT responded that, while their ditching of old  party cards was positive, it was not sufficient. Ghannouchi said  some ministers were kept on because they were needed in the  run-up to elections, expected in the next two months.

The government says at least 78 people were killed in the  unrest, and the cost in damage and lost business was $2 billion.  But unrest in the streets was fading by Tuesday.

The weeks of protests over poverty and unemployment which  forced Ben Ali out prompted speculation across the Arab world  that other repressive governments might also face unrest.

In Syria, opponents of President Bashar al-Assad said that  the overthrow of dictatorship in Tunisia had fatally undermined  assertions by Arab governments that their repression is the only  alternative to either chaos or extreme Islamist rule.

“The uprising of the Tunisian people has proved that  peaceful democratic change is possible, and that the line these  dictatorial regimes peddle about chaos or fundamentalism does  not wash,” an opposition group, The Damascus Declaration, said  in a statement, which was sent to Reuters.