Tunisia purges govt, wins union endorsement

TUNIS, (Reuters) – The Tunisian government ditched   loyalists to its ousted president yesterday — a move which  won backing from the powerful labour union and could help defuse  protests which have inspired people across the Middle East.

Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi, who retained his job,  said 12 ministers would be replaced, purging the interim  government of members of the former ruling party including the  interior, defence and foreign ministers.

“This government is a transitional, interim government that  will remain until it completes its mission of taking the country  to democracy,” Ghannouchi said in a live television address.

Weeks of violent protests by Tunisians angered by poverty,  repression and corruption forced President Zine al-Abidine Ben  Ali to flee to Saudi Arabia on Jan. 14 after 23 years in power.

But they had been angered after an interim government led by  Ghannouchi had retained many former Ben Ali loyalists.
The purge is unlikely to fully quell protests in Tunisia,  some of which are spontaneous and others more organised.
After the prime minister’s television address, chants of  “bread, water but no Ghannouchi” broke out among protesters who  had launched a sit-in outside his office to demand he resign.

“We reject Ghannouchi totally. We were surprised to see him  announce the government,” said protester Mohammed Fadel. “Since  he did not fight corruption under Ben Ali, he is an accomplice.”

But the move would nonetheless provide greater legitimacy to  the interim government, which had struggled to impose order  after Ben Ali fled.
Earlier yesterday, thousands of demonstrators thronged  Bourguiba Avenue, the main boulevard in the capital Tunis,  demanding that the government resign.   They also broke through police lines outside the prime  minister’s office, where hundreds of demonstrators had pledged  to camp out until the government resigned.

The purge replaced members of Ben Ali’s former ruling RCD  party with ministers who Ghannouchi said were chosen for their  high levels of experience and qualifications.

He also promised the new government — agreed after talks  with all political parties and civil society groups — would  lead the country into its first free elections, to be organised  by an independent body and monitored by international observers.

The powerful UGTT labour union, which has a large membership  and played an important role in organising the protests, will  not join the new government itself but would approve the new  lineup, a union source told Reuters.
TUNISIA INSPIRES PROTESTS ACROSS MIDEAST

Tunisia’s uprising has electrified Arabs across the Middle  East and North Africa, where many countries share the complaints  of poor living standards and authoritarian rule.

Inspired by Tunisia’s example, thousands of Egyptians have  taken to the streets to demand an end to President Hosni  Mubarak’s 30-year rule.
Protests have also spread to Yemen, where thousands took to  the streets to demand a change of government.
In addition to the cabinet reshuffle, Tunisia is aiming to  set up a council of “wise men” to guide the country to democracy  from the authoritarian state run by Ben Ali.

Veteran politician Ahmed Mestiri, a prominent figure during  the era of Tunisia’s independence leader Habib Bourguiba, said  he hoped to head the council.
“The council would protect the revolt that broke out  spontaneously. The time has come for the process to be  structured,” Mestiri, 80, said in an interview on Wednesday.

In the unrest that brought down Ben Ali, the United Nations  has said that 117 died, including 70 killed by gunfire.