tunisia the first to start a revolution abby ackerman p. 2

11
Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

Upload: sabina-norton

Post on 31-Dec-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

TunisiaThe first to start a revolution

Abby Ackerman P. 2

Page 2: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

Tunisia

Page 3: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

BackstoryFrustration in Tunisian citizens had been mounting for years

The straw that broke the camel’s back: The martyrdom of a fruit vendor, following an incident with a policewoman

Known as the “Jasmine Revolution” of “Facebook Revolution”

The first in a string of civil uprisings to shake North Africa

Page 4: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

The Antagonist

“President” Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in power since 1987

Widely unpopular; however protests were not known world wide due to cover-ups

Protests finally reached him personally 1/14/11

Fled that day to Saudi Arabia

Has been charged in absentia to 30 years in prison

Page 5: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

The Protagonists

Tunisian citizens, especially youths, broadcast the revolution as it was happening across a wide range of social media

Aided by the Muslim Brotherhood

Aimed to set up an actual democracy, not a dictator in a president’s clothing

Page 6: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

How It All Went DownCitizens were frustrated. Some where downright mad. Some threw rocks. Civil uprisings soon followed.

Hundreds took part in anti-Ben Ali protests

Islamists flocked to the streets to protest freely; long shut out under Ben Ali’s regime

Page 7: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

The Domino Effect

News of the revolution in Tunisia spread quickly throughout North Africa

Countries such as Algeria, Egypt, and Libya soon followed with their own protests and political uprisings

Page 8: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

And So He Ran

Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled his country on January 14th, hours after promising “change”

The upheaval caused many of the political officials to resign

Military briefly stepped in to help facilitate change

Tunisia set up a new democracy

Page 9: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

So Now What?Tunisia recently held their first democratic election post-revolution

Mixed feelings remain about the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood in the new democracy (Especially in foreign relations)

Tunisia’s successful revolution is still inspiring other Arab countries fighting for theirs“People of Tunisia are voting

freely for the first time. This blue finger is the proof that I voted. So happy, so proud.”(From Imgur.com)

Page 10: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

Arab Spring vs. American RevolutionBoth successful in their revolutions

Both had been frustrated with oppressive regimes for a while

Tunisia had more widespread public support, despite most of the broadcast across social media being done by a sold core of activists

America did not have facebook back then, and tweets only came from birds

Page 11: Tunisia The first to start a revolution Abby Ackerman P. 2

Sourceshttp://imgur.com/gallery/FFdIW

Tony Karon. “Tunisia’s Revolt: A Dilemma for the U.S in the Arab World”. Time. 18 Jan 2011. 25 Oct 2011. http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2042936,00.html

Vivienne Walt. “Tunisia’s Nervous Neighbors Watch the Jasmine Revolution”. Time. 31 Jan 2011. 26 Oct 2011. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2043433-3,00.html

Yasmine Ryan. “How Tunisia’s Revolution Began”. Al Jazeera English. 26 Jan 2011. 25 October 2011. http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/01/2011126121815985483.html