polite_gandalf wrote on Mar 21
st, 2015 at 9:07am:
Soren wrote on Mar 20
th, 2015 at 6:46pm:
polite_gandalf wrote on Mar 20
th, 2015 at 2:46pm:
What about the muslims that just created a democracy - that these terrorists are attacking sprint?
Guess the religion of the people who are murderously resisting and sabotaging Tunisian democracy.
Guess the religion of the people who just created the democracy and who have so successfully resisted the terrorists?
Your logic fails.
Who created democracy??
Ben Ali’s rule was never secular: rather than trying to separate religion and state, he instead sought to monopolise control of all things religious, from dictating Friday sermons in the mosques to articulating what Islam should mean to Tunisians. Yet even then, there were signs of an emerging jihadi threat. A 2002 attack on a synagogue on the island of Djerba killed 19 people, mostly tourists, and was claimed by al-Qaeda. Then in 2006-7, hundreds of young men were jailed after a failed armed assault in Suleiman.
After the fall of Ben Ali in 2011, many Salafi leaders came out of jail or returned from exile abroad. In the new security vacuum their groups flourished, appealing to young, frustrated and unemployed Tunisians who saw there would be no quick solution to the deep socio-economic crisis that triggered the revolution in the first place. The chaos in Libya next door only served their cause.
The Islamist movement Ennahdha, which won the first elections in October 2011 and led a coalition government, thought at first it could coax the more extreme Salafi elements onto a path of moderation but later had to admit its naïvety. The government blamed the two political assassinations of 2013 on the group Ansar al-Sharia and banned it but it is still not clear who was really behind the attacks.
Eventually, Ennahdha was forced out of power in January 2014, in large part because of its security failings. And since then, the situation has scarcely improved.
Groups including al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb continue to operate in Tunisia. Until now, Islamic State was not thought to have made headway in the country but it is as yet unclear whether the group played any role in inspiring or orchestrating the Bardo attack.