Skip to content

Tunisia starts releasing prisoners

TUNIS, Tunisia — Tunisia’s new government began releasing prisoners Wednesday and moved to track down assets stashed overseas by its deposed president and his widely disliked family.

TUNIS, Tunisia — Tunisia’s new government began releasing prisoners Wednesday and moved to track down assets stashed overseas by its deposed president and his widely disliked family.

Tensions on the streets appeared to be calming as the administration tried to show it was distancing itself from the old guard.

Hundreds of protesters led a rally in central Tunis demanding that former allies of deposed President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali stop clinging to power. The march ended with some 50 young people standing in a circle reading poetry and singing songs. In recent days, police have fired tear gas and clubbed protesters.

The United Nations said more than 100 people have died in the unrest that surrounded Ben Ali’s ouster.

Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Friday after 23 years in power, and a caretaker government is now struggling to calm this moderate Muslim country on the Mediterranean Sea, popular among European tourists and seen as an ally in the West’s fight against terrorism.

Ben Ali’s longtime prime minister, Mohamed Ghannouchi, kept his post and is trying to convince Tunisians a new era has arrived — even if the composition of the interim government has many faces from the old guard.

Hafed al Maki, 50, who works at the country’s largest insurance company, said he would not wait for the 60-day constitutional limit for new presidential elections to pass “because that is enough time for the old cronies to set their roots in and start their old ways again, thieving and taking our resources. No way that’s happening again.”

Opposition figures and the prime minister’s office have said that the 60-day limit is unrealistically short, and the delay will more likely be six to seven months.

Swiss officials estimate Tunisian government officials have put about $620 million into Swiss banks, and the anti-corruption group Transparency International France and two other associations filed suit in Paris alleging corruption by Ben Ali and his wife.

Tunisia’s official TAP news agency reported that the Central Bank had taken control of Banque Zitouna, a bank founded by a son-in-law of Ben Ali, to protect the deposits of accountholders and prevent a run on the bank.

The national prosecutor’s office moved to investigate overseas bank accounts, real estate and other assets held by Ben Ali, his wife Leila Trabelsi and other relatives. His relations — especially his wife’s family — were seen as corrupt and dominated many businesses in the country.

The Swiss president said that her country’s federal council agreed to freeze any assets in Switzerland belonging to Ben Ali, to help work up a possible criminal case over alleged stolen funds.

In Geneva, the UN’s human rights chief, Navi Pillay, said she was sending an “assessment team” to Tunisia in coming days, and estimated more than 100 deaths have occurred so far during the unrest in Tunisia.

Tunis’ stock exchange, many shops, schools and universities remained closed and some workers have gone on strike. A curfew remains in place, thought the government shortened it as security improved.

In another effort to ease tensions, the government moved ahead Wednesday with plans to release 1,800 prisoners who had less than six months to serve, the official state news agency TAP reported. It was not immediately clear what prompted the release, or whether any were political prisoners.

The unrest has rattled Tunisia’s economy, which had seen impressive growth in recent years. Moody’s Investor Service downgraded Tunisia’s government bond ratings Wednesday, citing “significant uncertainties” surrounding Tunisia’s economic and political future.

Moody’s cut the rating by one notch, to “Baa3” from “Baa2,” and also downgraded its outlook to negative from stable. The new rating is one notch above “junk bond” status.