Protests against the deadly attack at Tunisia’s National Bardo Museum continued on Thursday, with outraged demonstrators condemning extremism while vowing to continue the country’s fight for democracy.
At least 20 people were killed and more than 50 wounded when two gunmen attacked the museum in Tunis midday on Wednesday. The t the office of the Tunisian president said on Thursday that state authorities had arrested nine people suspected of helping the two assailants.
On Wednesday evening, following the siege, thousands of Tunisians flocked to the capital’s main thoroughfare, Avenue Habib Bourguiba, waving red Tunisian flags and singing songs from the 2011 Arab Spring revolution. “Tunisia is free, terrorism out!” they chanted.
And the country’s main trade union confederation and other civil society groups called for a silent demonstration later on Thursday outside the Bardo museum.
Tunisia is often described as a key success story of the Arab spring—and according to some analysts, that is precisely why it suffered Wednesday’s attacks.
“The symbolism of such an attack occurring in Tunisia—the birthplace of the so-called Arab Spring—is significant,” wrote Nobel Peace Prize nominee and Tunisian blogger Lina Ben Mhenni, in an op-ed at the Guardian. “The perpetrators of the attack seem to have targeted the beacon of democracy that Tunisia has come to represent in the region.”
“The terrorists seem to want to address Tunisians to tell them that the country won’t be spared the fate of its neighbor Libya and other Arab countries such as Syria, Yemen and Iraq, where chaos is taking hold as Islamist groups tighten their grip,” she continued. “They seem to address the Tunisian authorities to say that the successes they are claiming when it comes to fighting terrorism are nothing but a mirage. They also seem to target tourism—an important sector for the Tunisian economy.”
As Ben Mhenni notes, while chaos is reigning in other countries in the Middle East, Tunisia has succeeded in ensuring a relative stability—thanks at least in part to the economic benefits provided by the tourism industry. The country peacefully elected a new parliament in December and has prided itself as a model of political transition since the overthrow of the brutal authoritarian Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in 2011.
Those post-revolution gains could be undermined, however, by extremist attacks.
“What is being targeted is the civic way of life enabling citizens to live at once as Muslims and democrats,” said Larbi Sadiki, a Tunisian writer and senior lecturer in Middle East politics at the University of Exeter, in a piece at Al-Jazeera America.
Sadiki continued: