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{
  "authors": [
    "Anouar Boukhars"
  ],
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  "centerAffiliationAll": "dc",
  "centers": [
    "Carnegie Endowment for International Peace",
    "Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center"
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  "collections": [
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  "regions": [
    "North Africa",
    "Egypt",
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Source: Getty

Other

Exclusion and Despair Make Tunisia’s Border Regions a Powder Keg

While Tunisia is often and rightly lauded for its progress, social inequality and regional asymmetries are undermining the country’s democratic transition.

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By Anouar Boukhars
Published on Jul 19, 2016
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The Middle East Program in Washington combines in-depth regional knowledge with incisive comparative analysis to provide deeply informed recommendations. With expertise in the Gulf, North Africa, Iran, and Israel/Palestine, we examine crosscutting themes of political, economic, and social change in both English and Arabic.

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Source: World Politics Review

Tunisia is often and rightly lauded for the progress it has made since the popular uprising that toppled longtime strongman Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011. But social inequality and regional asymmetries are undermining Tunisia’s democratic transition and deepening the chasm between a restless and rebellious periphery and an eastern Mediterranean coast that fears and misunderstands the bitter resentment of border communities.

These unaddressed challenges are also making it harder to secure the country from internal upheaval and terrorism. Aggrieved youths increasingly express their anger in fiery protests and street violence. This radical projection of grievances risks feeding a dangerous spiral of violent extremism. Already, thousands of disgruntled young Tunisians from the hinterlands have joined the so-called Islamic State in Syria and Libya, making Tunisia one of the largest sources of recruits for the group.

The Islamic State’s deepening presence just across the Libyan border further compounds this growing terror threat, as was amply underlined by the March 2016 dramatic terror assault on security forces in the border town of Ben Guerdane. The brazen attempt by dozens of Islamic State-trained sleeper cells to seize the town and inflame a rebellious populace into open revolt illustrates the group’s destabilizing potential to tap into the pervasive discontent in Tunisia’s border regions.

The stakes are high and the threats are real. There are no anchors of regional stability Tunisia can cling to. Its neighbors are either coming undone or ruthlessly defending a creaky authoritarian status quo. The European Union has provided Tunisia with significant aid since 2011, but is engulfed in its own crises and cannot devote the necessary resources to helping Tunisia consolidate democracy and pursue economic reforms. The United States has extended more than $700 million in financial assistance and rounds of loan guarantees exceeding $1 billion since the start of the revolution. But this represents only a fraction of the support that Jordan and increasingly authoritarian Egypt get...

Read the full article at World Politics Review. 

About the Author

Anouar Boukhars

Former Nonresident Fellow, Middle East Program

Boukhars was a nonresident fellow in Carnegie’s Middle East Program. He is a professor of countering violent extremism and counter-terrorism at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, National Defense University.

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Anouar Boukhars
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Political ReformSecurityMilitaryNorth AfricaEgyptLibyaAlgeriaTunisiaMaghreb

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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