A Blog by the Editor of The Middle East Journal

Putting Middle Eastern Events in Cultural and Historical Context

Monday, January 17, 2011

The Flight of Ben Ali

So much is happening so fast, and there's so much to talk about, and it's a holiday here in the US and I need some family time. Let me first note for you this report in Le Monde from yesterday, citing European sources on the flight of Ben Ali. If you read French, read the original; if you don't, here are some key points:
  • Madame Ben Ali demanded gold ingots from the Bank of Tunisia; when that was refused she persuaded her husband to intervene, and left for Dubai with what a French source described as 1.5 tonnes (that would be metric tons) of gold, worth 45 million euros. She then joined her husband in Jidda.
  • Ben Ali did not expect to leave so quickly and had recorded another speech. The Army stepped in and expedited his departure.
  • Several European chanceries believe that the "Libyan security services" facilitated the "exfiltration" of Ben Ali from Tunisia. (I know "exfiltration" is now an English word, but now the French seem to be using it as well.) Qadhafi, by the way — the Guide of the Libyan Revolution — has made a speech lecturing the Tunisians on their folly in having a revolution, and urging them to bring Ben Ali back.
  • There is confusion about how Ben Ali departed. He either left by plane for Maltese airspace, only then decided to head for France, where he was turned away, and may have refueled in Sardinia without receiving landing permission from Italy; or, he may have flown from Tunis to Malta in a helicopter, and joined his jet there.
  • Ben Ali family members who did arrive in France (some reports say two other jets were involved) left subsequently for Doha.
I'll be posting more later. A lot is happening, in Tunis and in Lebanon, today.

3 comments:

David Mack said...

Following up on the perceptive comment by "Anonymous" to one of your previous posts, "thawra or inqilaab?"

Given the role the army played in thwarting efforts of Ben Ali and the police to suppress a popular uprising by force, as the Iranian regime did a year ago, combined with a provisional government that is mostly stalwarts from the official party, I would say that we may have moved to the "Thermidor" stage of the revolution in fairly short order. Plenty of Tunisians will be very concerned to see an end to looting and burning and the return of fresh fish and European tourists.

David Mack said...

P.S. I don't want to push the parallel with French Revolution too far. Unlike Louis and Marie Antoinette, Ben Ali and Leila Trebelsi escaped with their heads. Certainly, of course, Tunisians are more civilized then the French of that era.

A said...

Most urgent thing about this Tunisian affair: how would you properly transliterate the new president's name? Shouldn't there be a shadda on the z in Mebazaa, i.e. al-Mubazza' or something?