By
Konrad Pedziwiatr
24 Mar 2015
After the terrorist attack on Bardo complex on 18th
March 2015 and plans to introduce new anti-terrorist legislation, many
questions are asked regarding threats to Tunisian democracy. In this context,
the following interview with Rashid Ghannouchi, leader of Ennahdha, conducted
on 12th December 2014 by Konrad Pedziwiatr, is especially relevant.
“Tunisia is the only democratic country in the Arab
world”, one may read sprayed in French and Arabic on the wall of the
construction site by the majestic Municipal Theatre on the main street of
Tunis, Bourguiba Avenue. The graffiti captures well the mood of the vast
majority of Tunisians who four years after the start of the Arab Spring feel
proud of this new political reality. After decades of authoritarian rule the transition
to democracy was surely not an easy and straightforward process. Several
attempts were made by various forces (inter alia by Salafists) to derail this
process and stop the democratisation of the country.
The fact that Tunisia has managed to overcome these
obstacles and today is a democratic country with a new constitution and fairly
smoothly running democratic institutions is partially also a consequence of the
decisions taken by the first post-revolutionary coalition government, with
Islamist party Ennahdha at its head. It is due to these strategic decisions
made by the Ennahdha leadership over the last four years that Tunisia has
managed to preserve the achievements of the 2011 revolution and remain an
island of democracy in a sea of autocratic regimes in the Arab world.
The following interview with the leader of Ennahdha, Sheikh Rashid Ghannouchi, sheds light on several of these decisions. It took place in the crucial moment between the first and second round of the first free presidential elections. Lack of official support for any of the running candidates (Moncef Marzouki and Beji Caid Essebsi) during the elections allowed Ennahdha (the second-strongest party in the Tunisian Parliament) to enter a coalition and form a national unity government with Nidaa Tounes led by Habib Essid, after Essebsi became the first democratically elected president of Tunisia (at the end of December 2014).
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Ennahdha achieved a spectacular victory in the
first post-revolutionary parliamentary elections. In the last elections,
however, your party came second to Nidaa Tounes. Why?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - It is the effect of governance. Some mistakes were
made. People's expectations were also very high after the revolution and no
government could fulfil these expectations. We couldn't deliver all we promised
during the campaign, so we were partly punished for this.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Was Ennahdha punished partly or severely?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - I think we were punished only partially. We lost
about 20% of our seats, but our colleagues from the Troika lost everything. We
lost one-third of our votes, but the Congress Party and Ettakatol lost almost
everything, so they paid a very high price for being in the government during
the transition period.
Tunisians judged us for our deeds, and many considered
our output and achievements to be insufficient. We have already revised our
strategy and we will continue to do so.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Why did you decide not to run for any office?
Rashid Ghannouchi - I did so to avoid any sort of
polarisation between the Islamists and secularists. So if I present myself as a
representative of so-called political Islam, some kind of polarisation may
emerge in the country, which will not be conducive to a successful transitional
period. So from the start I avoided the scenario of a confrontation between
Islamism and secularity.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - But at the same time Ennahdha is surely a very
important element of the political landscape?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - For the same reason we also avoided openly
supporting any candidate for the presidency to avoid the Egyptian scenario.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Is there anything that can change your decision?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - No.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - What does it mean, then, to be the leader of one of
the largest political parties in Tunisia and at the same time being somehow
detached from day-to-day political life in Parliament?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - I am not detached. I am a head of one of the
largest political parties in Tunisia, but I do not campaign; other people can
play these roles. I would also like to encourage young people to take power.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - What are the key elements of Ennahdha's social
base?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Ennahdha does not represent any specific social
class and our supporters come from all classes and regions. We have all types
of members: both poor and rich people are members.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - What were the key factors that allowed Ennahdha to
achieve such a spectacular victory in the first post-revolutionary elections?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Ennahdha was the main victim of the former regime,
so it was only natural that people rewarded a movement that was tortured and
repressed for 25 years.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - How did Ennahdha manage to build its structures so
quickly and efficiently after the revolution?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - It is to be expected that the Tunisian people
recognised what Ennahdha has done for their liberation from dictatorship and
supported us.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Is Ennahdha a movement or a political party?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - It is both. Earlier we were more a social movement,
but now we are more a political party. Maybe we will divide social and
political activities during the next Ennahdha general assembly, which will take
place in summer 2015. This issue will actually be the main topic of our
congress.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Why is this matter important and has to be dealt
with?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Currently many members and leaders of Ennahdha
consider that politics dominates our total project. This is the nature of
politics, which could take complete control of the project. But our society
needs social, religious and cultural activities too. If we mix both, politics
will dominate the scene. Religion, social and cultural activities will be
marginalised. We need to focus more on society than on the government.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Is there a plan to set up separate organisation
that will deal with these issues?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Yes. If we decide to separate social, cultural and
political activities, then I imagine we will establish a separate organisation
to deal with these matters.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Will the name change from Harakat (movement) to
Hizb (party)?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Yes, possibly the name could change.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - What is current and future role of dawah within
Ennahdha? There is a separate Maktab ad-Dawah (Dawah Branch) in Ennahdha?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - We have been currently discussing whether we will
continue as a one institution where dawah and politics are mixed or separate
them.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Is it necessary to separate these matters?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - WThey can be separated. There are many possible
scenarios and many links between dawah and politics in Islamic movements. Some
movements keep them together while others separate them. For example, in Jordan
and Morocco they have been separated.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - In your writings from the 1990s a key concept is
that of an Islamic state. Is it still relevant for today's Tunisia?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - I believe it is still relevant. I think our
Tunisian state is not secular one, but an Islamic one. Our constitution is
based on this combination between Islam and freedom, Islam and modernity, Islam
and democracy. The main idea of our project is the compatibility between Islam
and democracy and we reflect this in our constitution. Tunisia is an Islamic
state and this is guaranteed in the first clause of the constitution, which
says that Tunisia is a Muslim and Arab state.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - At the same time there is no mention of sharia in
the constitution.
Rashid Ghannouchi - It does not matter; Islam contains
sharia. Sharia is not a strange concept - it is part of Islam. As long as there
is no church in Islam, it cannot be represented on Earth by any institution. No
one in Islam can pretend that he is a spokesman of Islam - God cannot be
embodied on Earth. So the Ummah or the people of Islam need a legislative
system to elect a Parliament that can represent, translate and interpret Islam.
If Parliament consists of Muslims, their decisions are Muslim by consensus.
They will then translate their faith into law, politics, economic principles
and an educational system.
I believe the essence of sharia is in our constitution
- it is the way of thinking that underlines the constitution, embodying the
values of freedom, justice and unity. It is there with all these
representations. The word 'sharia' itself does not have to be there. The
concept of sharia is completely wrongly understood today and as such it is
divisive. It was a good idea not to use it in the constitution.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - What is Islamist about Ennahdha? Or what is
Ennahdha's Islamic project?
Rashid Ghannouchi - To liberate people from the
tyranny, poverty and ignorance; to spread justice, freedom and a good life to
all the people and to base all of these values in the Islamic faith. The main
goal of our project is to link faith and justice, science, freedom, democracy
and the arts.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - There are fears that the Islamisation of Tunisian
society will lead to some of its freedoms being curbed.
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Society does not have to be Islamised, because it
is already Muslim. We have freedom of conscience.
Every Muslim can establish a direct contact with God,
so no one can claim control.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - And secularists shouldn't be afraid that an
Ennahdha government will, for example, ban the drinking of alcohol?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - It is pointless to impose this kind of law, because
if people want to drink alcohol, they will find a way to do it [laughing]. The
state has nothing to do with the way in which people decide to live their
lives. People are free to choose their way of life; it is not the role of the
state to impose a way of life on people. What people drink or wear has nothing
to do with the state.
The role of the state is to provide services to the
people, above all security and justice. The state should be the guardian of
freedoms and provide infrastructure. Promoting a certain way of life is the
role of civil society. This is why Ennahdha will most probably separate these
activities from the party.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Do the younth and women have enough voice in
Ennahdha?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - In the previous assembly, out of 89 Ennahdha
members of Parliament (MPs), 43 were women, i.e. almost a state of parity. We
are the only party that respects this parity. Women are to be found at all
levels of Ennahdha, as well as in the Shura.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - How many women are there in the Shura?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Up to 20%. They are four in the executive
committee. We encourage them to participate and be present at all levels.
Women's representation in our party is much bigger than in many secular
parties. Even in the trade unions there are hardly any women in key positions.
I have no objections to a woman becoming president of the country.
Young people are also to be found at all levels of
Ennahdha. Some of them, like Sayida Ounissi (one of the youngest MPs in the
current Tunisian Parliament and number one on Ennahdha's electoral list in
France during the last elections - KP), with whom you spoke, even have
ambitions to become party leaders. When she was still very young she used to
say that she would like to replace me [laughing].
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - In June 2012 you went to Cairo to persuade the Egyptian
Muslim Brotherhood to be more inclusionary in its political approach. Why did
they not listen?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - I think the Egyptian situation is much more
complicated than the Tunisian one. You can't measure it with the same criteria
as in Tunisia. The situation there is more complicated, with the important role
of the army and the Coptic church. Also, the geopolitical nature of Egypt is
different. I think the collapse of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood is not a
fault of the Brotherhood, but primarily of many other factors.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - How has the situation in Egypt affected Tunisia?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Our opposition tried to copy the Egyptian coup
d'état, but luckily, thanks to national dialogue, we managed to contain it and
avoid the collapse of the Tunisian democratic transition.
We agreed to withdraw and replace the elected
government with a technocrat government. In this way we avoided the Egyptian
scenario.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Can Egypt return to the path of democratic
transition?
Rashid Ghannouchi - I think the Tunisian revolution
has taken the Arab world into a new era. It is only a matter of time before
this world will continue its march towards democracy. The speed of this process
depends on the extent of complications in each country. The situation in Egypt,
Iraq and Syria is more complicated than in Tunisia, which is why the
establishment of democracy is taking more time there and demanding more
sacrifices. This process, however, cannot be stopped, because people have
discovered their own capacities and realised that despots are not strong
enough.
The same happened with the French and American
revolutions. They also took the world into a new era. But in France it took
more than 100 years to build a stable democracy.
Now what happened in the Arab world means a search is
under way for a new model of governance. The old model has been shaken, but the
new model has not yet been firmly established. The Arab world is searching for
a new democratic model. In Tunisia it took five years; in another it may take
ten or more years. But there is no way back. Often the move from tyranny to
democracy goes through a period of chaos.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Here in Tunisia it seems that the potential for
chaos is quite well managed.
Rashid
Ghannouchi - We try to avoid chaotic scenarios, but we are also
under threat that we might enter a chaotic period and imitate what has happened
in Egypt and Libya. The Libyan situation is a particularly difficult one. So
the Tunisian model is very threatened by what has been happening in the Arab
world and the domino effect.
The situation in Libya has a major influence on
Tunisia. Some young people receive training there and try to smuggle weapons
into Tunisia. We cannot isolate ourselves from what is happening there. The
same applies to Algeria.
We believe that Tunisians are very peaceful and that
there is a heritage of state governance. The notion of the state is very deeply
held. Apart from that, we have the same religion and language. The Tunisian
people are the most unified people in the Arab world and one of the best
educated. This has played an important part in our successful transformation.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - How do you explain a significant number of
Tunisians fighting for Daesh (Islamic State)?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - This is a heritage of the Ben Ali regime. The lack
of proper channels for religious education pushed many people to search for it
in the wrong places.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Is there any room for peaceful Salafists in
Parliament?
Rashid Ghannouchi - They participated in the
elections, but didn't win any seats. So the Tunisian people are very moderate
and do not accept the Salafist interpretation of Islam. They do not go to
extremes.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - Is Turkey still a model to follow?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - We benefit from all models, but we prefer to
establish our own.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - What are the key challenges facing Tunisia?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Poverty and terrorism, which feed each other.
Konrad
Pedziwiatr - How do you see Tunisia in 10-20 years' time?
Rashid
Ghannouchi - Like Malaysia, Singapore or Turkey - as a developed
Muslim country. I believe it is possible to achieve this.
Konrad Pedziwiatr holds a PhD from the Katholieke
Universiteit Leuven (Belgium). He is currently an assistant professor at the
Cracow University of Economics and coordinator of the project "Islamism
and Pluralism: The Islamist Movements in Egypt and Tunisia after the Arab
Spring", which is financed by the National Science Centre. His research
interests include Islam and Muslims in Europe, religions, and migrations and
social movements in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa.
Source:
http://religion.info/english/interviews/article_662.shtml#.VRjgJPnF9nN
URL: https://newageislam.com/interview/tunisia-islamists-fragile-democracy-interview/d/102168