CALL TO THE PUBLIC OPINION
Tunisia has been living for years a deterioration of its political,
social and
cultural situation. Freedoms reached, lately, an intolerable
level of
deprivation.
During these last weeks, the regime seized the headquarters of the
Tunisian
Association of Magistrates [ATM] and installed at its head a puppet
committee;
in addition it fixed a jurisdictional decision to avoid the Human
Rights'
League [LTDH] to hold its 6th national congress and, during the same
period,
banned the congress of the Tunisian Journalists Syndicate [SJT].
The
situation of the political prisoners that has been lasting for more
than a
decade is alarmingly worsening: bad treatments and torture are bouncing
back.
Political parties which are deprived of the use of public spaces and
any
resources of political intervention are paralysed and literally
besieged.
These serious developments intervene at a time when important sectors
of the
civil society, lawyers, magistrates, journalists, academics,
syndicates,
militants of human rights' defense, collectively expressed their
aspiration for
more freedom and a more important participation. They also intervene
while
Tunisia is ready to host next month, the World Summit for Information
Society
[WSIS].
Deliberately ignoring these aspirations, the regime increased
repression these
last days. It did not hesitate to prohibit meetings of local sections
of the
LTDH and to brutalize some of their members. On another hand, during
political
lawsuits, violating the principle of lawsuits exposure to the public,
the
regime prohibited the courts' access to the public and to
observers.
This systematic security option puts the social and political elites in
front
of a serious challenge: either accept the arbitrary use of force
or face
the the regime with peaceful means!
To express their refusal of arbitrariness and to demand the respect of
political and human rights of the Tunisian people, the signatories of
this
call, representatives of associations from the civil society and
political
parties, decided to undertake an unlimited hunger strike as from
October 18,
2005.
They claim:
1. Freedom of
association by:
Recognizing all associations and parties that claim a legal existence
Removing all obstacles, which block the activity of associations and
legally
recognized parties, in particular the Tunisian Association of the
Magistrates,
the Tunisian League of Human Rights and the Tunisian Journalists
Syndicate.
2. Freedom for the press and the
media by:
Stopping the censure striking the written media, publications and
Internet
sites
Suspending pressures exerted on journalists
Opening the audio-visual media to all schools of thought
Instituting an independent and plural authority, which would deal with
the control
of this public utility
Giving receipts to all newspapers which ask for the authorization to
publish
(while waiting for the abrogation of this unjust measure).
3. The immediate release of political
prisoners
The release of all political prisoners, Islamists, Net surfers, young
people
wrongfully accused of terrorism as well as the release of the lawyer
Mohammed
Abbou and the adoption of a general amnesty law.
The hunger strikers launch a pressing call to all the democratic
forces,
associations, parties, independent personalities, to mobilize around
this
strike, bring any form of support to it and make succeed its claims,
which are
a prelude to Reforms and Democratic Change.
Tunis 18. October 2005