[IRP] FW: <edu-factory> Ben Ali trembles! From blogs to trade unions bureaus the Tunisian revolt explodes

michael gurstein gurstein
Fri Jan 7 19:26:42 EET 2011


I just noticed this below!... (I should say that the situation in Tunisia
has received very little coverage in the N Am media, at least I have seen
nothing on this as yet... cf. 

 <http://news.google.ca/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&cf=all&ned=ca&hl=en&q=tunisia>
http://news.google.ca/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&cf=all&ned=ca&hl=en&q=tunisia

M
 
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From: edufactory-bounces at listcultures.org
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Sent: Friday, January 07, 2011 9:08 AM
To: edufactory at listcultures.org
Subject: <edu-factory> Ben Ali trembles! From blogs to trade unions bureaus
the Tunisian revolt explodes



By FULVIO MASSARELLI




Dictator Ben Ali trembled! And he is still trembling if is it true that he
parked a jet plane close to the presidential residence of Chartage, which
should be ready for an evacuation plan. 

The revolt stretches its lenght, spreads itself through all the cities and
bears down on the regime after 23 years from its institution. Even in
Tunisia, as well as on the other side of the Mediterranean Sea, the
struggling education sector is the one which is starting a process of
refusal and social conflict,emerging from the crisis as social vanguard and
convergence point for the many workers' struggles that have been coming one
after the other - as fragmented as radical and brave - for decades now. 

After december 17th when Mohamed Bouazizi, a graduate and unemployed man,
set himself on fire in Sidi Bouzid in protest against the seizure of his
grocery stand, Tunisia mobilized and the revolt started off. First localized
in the Sidi Bouzid zone, it later did spread to all the productive hubs of
the Maghrebi country, and then reached even the most peripherals towns and
zones, in a weaving of solidarity and struggle that sees side by side
upper-school and university students, upper-school professors, workers,
unemployed, lawyers and rank-and-file trade unions' activists, unwilling to
yield to the extremely violent repression carried out by the regime. 

The intersection, or an incidence, between two spaces of organizations is
supporting struggles and mobilizations - indeed, trade unions and social
networks, and blogs. The former, since the very first day of uproar in Sidi
Bouzid, had their doors wide opened by the rank-and-file trade-unionists;
which turned their office rooms into hubs where knowledge, passions and
skills of the emerging subjectivities have come together. The students and
the unemployed graduates had therefore found a place where they could
connect the political revival of the revolt to the skills developed by many
rank-and-file trade unionists, and to the knowledge of lawyers and
upper-school professors that in great numbers did choose from the beginning
on which side to stand. 

So, the trade union offices did become places for assemblies in the moments
of respite, but also bases and permanent social garrisons where having
marches and initiatives start from in all Tunisian cities. The call which
roams everywhere on the web is to go in front of the trade union's bureaus
and wait for the numbers to increase, then march on or carry out the protest
initiative. And even this time the social networks are able to give
continuity to the communications between the localities and to denounce the
repression of the regime. 

Ben Al?'s state apparat did put under surveillance the whole Tunisian web in
the month of december, yet. After the "Cable Gate" burst Wikileaks was shut
down and, more in general, was inhibited the access to all those information
sources which carried on the cables - characterized by overtly critical
tones against the north-African regime - and that since the outbreak of the
revolt became the point of reference of the rioters' web communication. 

With the deepening of these days' protests the netwar did immediately deepen
and experienced several hikes. Since december 30th, the Tunisian netizens'
communications (whose Facebook community is the biggest in the whole
Northern Africa) are being hindered by a sophisticated censorship system
(codenamed "Ammar"), able to prevent diffusion of photos, videos, keywords
(as the #sidibouzid hashtag used on Twitter) and other real time updates to
the rest of the planet. 

Still, in the latest hours, this frame was crossed and shocked by the
initiative of Anonymous, the hacktivist organization responsible last month
for large scale attacks against Mastercard, Visa, Paypal, Amazon and all the
other firms and companies that, after Washington's pressures, did de facto
contribute to the international isolation effort of Wikileaks, cutting its
financial channels and forfaiting availability to host its technical
platform. Through a brief communique, whose feeling is that of a call to
arms, Tunisia operation was issued (#OpTunisia). 

In no uncertain terms the hackers of the now notorious organization forced
Chartage's police regime to choose: as long as the media blackout - which is
making impossible a news reporting of the Tunisian protest - will go on, all
the organizations responsible for that censorship will be the target of
computer attacks. And the promise was kept: in a few hours, one after
another, several government websites were made unreachable. 

But, whether in december Anonymous "just" carried out some DDOS (that is,
operations aimed to prevent access to a website channeling towards it a
great deal of information, in order to make it unavailable), the attacks of
these days marked a step up in class. The website of Mohammed Ghannouchi,
the Tunisian prime minister, was defaced: for several hours in its home page
stood a message in which was reaffirmed that "Operation Tunisia" would have
to go on as long as necessary. Or at least until Tunis' government won't
decide to remove the cloak of censorship which envelopes the country's
internet communication system. 

Actually even this operation is contributing to change the balance of power
between the crowds and the regime, as social networks and blogs continue to
publish information and work as a tool for the promotion of initiatives, as
the recent flash mob organized in the capital shows ? managing to block
trains and metro lines, occupied by the demonstrators which joined the
initiative, and which involved a lot of other people which had no chance to
read the event page set up on Facebook. 

So, trade unions' bureaus and the web are by now the two spaces crossed by
the spontaneous organization of the Tunisian revolt that, in front of an
incredible repression, continues to carry on the program of demands. If, in
the beginning, the contents of the first uproars were bound to a demand plan
basically interested in reclaiming employment for the unemployed
upper-school and universitary graduates, with the extension of the
mobilization to other cities the crowds began to demand and struggle,
wishing and affirming the will to conquer even more: that is, the freedom
from the regime, and a general re-distribution of wealth against the crisis.
This as formidable as sudden step in the revolt program proves the
subjectivity leading the mobilization to be right: the struggling education
sector is managing to speak to all the society and to involve into the
crowds' demonstrations many other struggles, both for workers and civil
rights, that previously were actually hardly communicating and were
suffering fragmentation. 

Thanks to these days of revolt, the Gafsan miners (who brought to life a
mobilization with insurrectionary tendency in 2008) can have today on their
side dozens and dozens of lawyers, struggling to open up spaces of justice
in the Tunisian police regime. But this is just an example of many other
similar reciprocity backgrounds between social and political issues coming
together in the squares today, starting from the trade unions' bureaus and
from the social networks. 

Struggle and organization have been allowing, for more than 20 days, to
withstand an harshest degree of repression unleashed, in addition to
disinformation and censorship, on the territories and on the demonstrators'
bodies. Immediately the regime employed all of its violence and brutality to
put out and block the mobilization: Sidi Bouzid's city was completely shut
down and besieged by police and army, that in other cities shot against the
demonstrators as well, killing two and wounding dozens of them; many house
searches were carried out in the comrades' homes and the nightly and
in-demonstration arrests brought dozens and dozens of demonstrators in
prison. These repressive events against activists, trade-unionists and
demonstrators are joined by the tortures carried out against youths, even
minors (in Menzel Bouzayane even a 14-th years old child was tortured during
a provisional arrest), and kidnappings and beatings of reporters and
lawyers. The latter both in Tunis and in other cities were not able to enter
the court rooms as they were charged by the riot police (as happened in the
capital) or beated in their precincts by the political police. Disappeared
lawyers, beaten or kidnapped and then abandoned off-city, reporters
pre-emptively arrested or with their houses surrounded by political police,
which seizes computers, video-cameras and mobile phones. 

This time, all of this repressive machine seems not to intimidate the
movement but instead, as a female lawyer ? kidnapped and released after some
days by the political police - declared: "Ben Ali understands that this time
his days may be numbered; in the television speech made by the dictator for
the first time we caught an early thrill, an early sign of collapse". 

And she's right, since during the first week the institutional media and
communication framework simply ignored the cities in state of siege, the
army shooting at the demonstrators, the suicidal attempts of the unemployed
- in short for the official media the mobilization didn't exist at all. 

But in the following week the regime had to take one step back, until Ben
Ali, during a nation-wide speech on the regime's channels, admitted that
"efforts of exploitation of social unease are taking place, through the
efforts of isolated groups of criminals, manipulators and provocateurs that
want to hijack it towards noxious political goals". This admission, in the
context of the Tunisian police regime, is the first recognization of an
ongoing social revolt, with no more easily controllable outcomes by it, and
that in the strike called on january 12 could find the occasion to take yet
another step forward. 

For their composition, for the power they are expressing and the strenght
they are acquiring, the days of social conflict in Tunisia show once again
how the fire of knowledge is able to aim high into the territories of crisis
and to open up spaces of autonomy, to become a foremost social vanguard
where the work of the arms and of the brains recognize each other as common
and reciprocal background of struggles and liberation from crisis and
exploitation. From the old trade unions' bureaus the aim is for the
governatorate; from the web the regime's websites are being wrecked down; in
both places people organize spontaneously : this weaving is a sign that,
even beyond the borders of Fortress Europe, the alternative to the crisis
which is always and only the struggle and organization is building another
world without borders, finally our own one. 

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