Ben Ali sure of fifth term in Tunisia

Tunis, October 22: Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali can be sure of a new mandate in polls on Sunday.

Ben Ali is challenged by three other candidates in his bid for a fifth term, which will be the last under the constitution of 2002, which allows successive mandates but sets the age limit in elections to 75. Ben Ali is 73.

He has been in power since 1987.

In the last elections in 2004, Ben Ali was returned to office with 94.4 percent of the votes, while his Constitutional Democratic Rally (RCD) won an overwhelming majority in parliament.

In parallel legislative elections on Sunday, the RCD is expected to keep its majority in the Chamber of Deputies, where it has 214 seats.

The electoral campaign began on October 11 and Ben Ali has the support of the bosses’ organisation as well as that of the trade unions.

The RCD itself has 2.7 million members and is deeply entrenched in the north African country of some 10.3 million people. Ben Ali’s poster is everywhere and the RCD has been mobilising massively with its red and white colours, while the presidential purple is also draped from buildings, even in small villages.

Ben Ali’s wife Leila has also been a part of the media campaign.

His rivals are little known and their pictures appear on spaces set aside in the towns, while they also get media coverage, but can only rally a few hundred people to their meetings, according to witnesses.

Ahmed Brahim, 63, is trying to present himself as a real contender, who will not settle for the role of an “extra” on the sidelines of the vote.

A retired university professor, Brahim proposes bold reforms.

Other candidates in Sunday’s poll include Mohamed Bouchiha, 61, of the Party of Popular Unity (11 seats), and Ahmed Inoubli, 51, of the Democratic Unionist Union (seven seats).

In the legislative polls, only the RCD will be putting up candidates in all 26 constituencies of the country, while seven opposition parties are contesting the ballot, with several independent candidates.

The RCD is guaranteed 75 percent of the parliamentary seats, while the last 25 percent will be contested under a proportional representation system.

On the strength of economic success, Ben Ali wants to elevate Tunisia to the rank of developed countries, and he has committed himself during his next mandate to reducing an unemployment rate of 14 percent.

Tunisia has a good record of prudent financial management and has been commended for its “solid economic foundations” and “real efforts at modernisation” by the International Monetary Fund.

—Agencies