Showing posts with label Bouazizi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bouazizi. Show all posts

WHAT REALLY HAPPENED WITH BOUAZIZI?


Bouazizi

The revolts in North Africa appeared to begin on 17 December 2010.

That was when, in the Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid, a municipal official, Fedia Hamdi, allegedly slapped 26-year-old fruit vendor, Mohamed Bouazizi.

Mohamed Bouazizi then apparently set himself alight, and the Arab world was set on fire.

On 19 April 2011, we learn that a Tunisian court has dropped the case at the heart of the protests

The case against Fedia Hamdi was closed after the vendor's family withdrew its original complaint.

Faouzi Hamdi, the brother of the accused municipal officer, claims his sister never slapped Bouazizi.

Faouzi Hamdi said the decision to throw out the case showed that in the new Tunisia the judicial system "is now independent."

Mohamed Bouazizi? Website for this image thestar.com

On the morning of 17 December 2010, Mohamed Bouazizi reportedly had an argument with a municipal inspector Ms. Faida Hamdy.

Some reports erroneously call Faida Hamdy a policewoman.

Bouazizi allegedly wrestled with Faida Hamdy.

Faida Hamdy allegedly slapped Mohamed in the face, spat at him, and made a slur against Bouazizi's deceased father. ("Peddler's martyrdom launched Tunisia's revolution".)

According to the new York Times ("Slap to a Man’s Pride Set Off Tumult in Tunisia"):

"Ms. Hamdy, arrested on orders from the now-deposed president himself, is in jail in another town.

"Her colleagues maintain that she is honest and did not take bribes.

"Her supervisor, who requested anonymity for fear of being beaten in the streets, said an investigation found that Ms. Hamdy had never slapped Mr. Bouazizi.

"'Do you really believe a woman can slap a man in front of 40 other people and no one would react?' he said."

Mohamed Bouazizi

Reportedly, Bouazizi went to the local Governor to complain, but the Governor would not see him.

Mohamed then "left a message for his mother on his Facebook page."

The message read: "I'm travelling, mother... I'm travelling and I ask who leads the travel to forget." (Mohamed Bouazizi - Wikipedia)

Around noon, Mohamed reportedly set himself alight with 'paint thinner' or 'petrol', depending on which source you read.

Reportedly, he was taken to a hospital specialising in burns.

On 31 December it was reported that doctors at the hospital where Mohammad was being treated said 'there were positive prognostic factors and that his condition was improving'.

(Man at the centre of Tunisia unrest recuperating, doctors say)

Mannoubia, Mohamed's mother is reported as saying: "The doctors told me that he should be fine."

Reportedly, Mohamed died on January 2011.



According to one report, Mohamed Bouazizi "set himself on fire outside the governor's office". ( Mohamed Bouazizi.)

According to another report, he "set fire to himself at the bus station." (Tunisian riot town stands firm in its fury)

According to this account Mohamed had decided to go to Tunis by bus.

Mohamed's facebook page read: "I'm travelling, mother... I am now going and I will not be coming back... I'm travelling and I ask who leads the travel to forget."

Reportedly, when he arrived at the bus station he found that he had no money.

He then set himself on fire.

Did he have money to buy paint thinner or petrol? (Tunisian riot town stands firm in its fury)

There have been reports that Mohamed Bouazizi still alive? s

Former president Ben Ali visits 'Mohamed' in hospital.

Mohamed 'sold fruits and vegetables on the streets in Sidi Bouzid' in Tunisia.

The media has reported that Mohamed had a university degree in computer science.

His sister, Samia Bouazizi, has stated that Mohamed never graduated from high school.

(Man at the centre of Tunisia unrest recuperating, doctors say)

In his late teens, Mohamed quit school.

(http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/01/201111684242518839.html)

"It was reported that Bouazizi had recently broken up with his girlfriend."

(Slap to a Man’s Pride Set Off Tumult in Tunisia)

After Mohamed's argument with the official, the protests grew.

"Mr. Zaydi, a high school student, slept during the day, and then he and his friends would take on the police at night."

At the same time, news of the unrest was spread on the Internet by people like Shamseddine Abidi, a 29-year old interior designer who posted videos and updates to his Facebook page.

A journalist from Al Jazeera was one of Mr. Abidi’s Facebook friends, and quickly the Arabic channel ... carried the news abroad. ("Slap to a Man’s Pride Set Off Tumult in Tunisia".)

Mansion - family pleads

This home was allegedly purchased in 2008 by Mohamed Sakher El Materi, the son-in-law of former president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The Toronto Star reports that the current owners have nothing to do with Tunisia. "They're Hungarian Jews".

~~

On 21 January 2011, Tunisia’s central bank again denied that ousted president Ben Ali and his wife fled with 1.5 tons of gold.

"There are 5.3 tons of gold in the coffers of the Tunisia Central Bank in Tunis and 1.5 tons at the Bank of England in London," a bank official told AFP. (Tunisia's central bank insists gold stocks unchanged)

~~

On 11 November 2010, the spooky Guardian was preparing us for change in Tunisia.

Tunisia, our supposedly stable 'friend'.


~~

MOHAMED BOUAZIZI & CORRUPTION IN TUNISIA

Mohamed Bouazizi? Website for this image thestar.com

On the morning of 17 December 2010, Mohamed Bouazizi reportedly had an argument with a municipal inspector Ms. Faida Hamdy.

Some reports erroneously call Faida Hamdy a policewoman.

Bouazizi allegedly wrestled with Faida Hamdy.

Faida Hamdy allegedly slapped Mohamed in the face, spat at him, and made a slur against Bouazizi's deceased father. ("Peddler's martyrdom launched Tunisia's revolution".)

According to the new York Times ("Slap to a Man’s Pride Set Off Tumult in Tunisia"):

"Ms. Hamdy, arrested on orders from the now-deposed president himself, is in jail in another town.

"Her colleagues maintain that she is honest and did not take bribes.

"Her supervisor, who requested anonymity for fear of being beaten in the streets, said an investigation found that Ms. Hamdy had never slapped Mr. Bouazizi.

"'Do you really believe a woman can slap a man in front of 40 other people and no one would react?' he said."

Mohamed Bouazizi

Reportedly, Bouazizi went to the local Governor to complain, but the Governor would not see him.

Mohamed then "left a message for his mother on his Facebook page."

The message read: "I'm travelling, mother... I'm travelling and I ask who leads the travel to forget." (Mohamed Bouazizi - Wikipedia)

Around noon, Mohamed reportedly set himself alight with 'paint thinner' or 'petrol', depending on which source you read.

Reportedly, he was taken to a hospital specialising in burns.

On 31 December it was reported that doctors at the hospital where Mohammad was being treated said 'there were positive prognostic factors and that his condition was improving'.

(Man at the centre of Tunisia unrest recuperating, doctors say)

Mannoubia, Mohamed's mother is reported as saying: "The doctors told me that he should be fine."

Reportedly, Mohamed died on January 2011.



According to one report, Mohamed Bouazizi "set himself on fire outside the governor's office". ( Mohamed Bouazizi.)

According to another report, he "set fire to himself at the bus station." (Tunisian riot town stands firm in its fury)

According to this account Mohamed had decided to go to Tunis by bus.

Mohamed's facebook page read: "I'm travelling, mother... I am now going and I will not be coming back... I'm travelling and I ask who leads the travel to forget."

Reportedly, when he arrived at the bus station he found that he had no money.

He then set himself on fire.

Did he have money to buy paint thinner or petrol? (Tunisian riot town stands firm in its fury)

There have been reports that Mohamed Bouazizi still alive? s

Former president Ben Ali visits 'Mohamed' in hospital.

Mohamed 'sold fruits and vegetables on the streets in Sidi Bouzid' in Tunisia.

The media has reported that Mohamed had a university degree in computer science.

His sister, Samia Bouazizi, has stated that Mohamed never graduated from high school.

(Man at the centre of Tunisia unrest recuperating, doctors say)

In his late teens, Mohamed quit school.

(http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/01/201111684242518839.html)

"It was reported that Bouazizi had recently broken up with his girlfriend."

(Slap to a Man’s Pride Set Off Tumult in Tunisia)

After Mohamed's argument with the official, the protests grew.

"Mr. Zaydi, a high school student, slept during the day, and then he and his friends would take on the police at night."

At the same time, news of the unrest was spread on the Internet by people like Shamseddine Abidi, a 29-year old interior designer who posted videos and updates to his Facebook page.

A journalist from Al Jazeera was one of Mr. Abidi’s Facebook friends, and quickly the Arabic channel ... carried the news abroad. ("Slap to a Man’s Pride Set Off Tumult in Tunisia".)

Mansion - family pleads

This home was allegedly purchased in 2008 by Mohamed Sakher El Materi, the son-in-law of former president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The Toronto Star reports that the current owners have nothing to do with Tunisia. "They're Hungarian Jews".

~~

On 21 January 2011, Tunisia’s central bank again denied that ousted president Ben Ali and his wife fled with 1.5 tons of gold.

"There are 5.3 tons of gold in the coffers of the Tunisia Central Bank in Tunis and 1.5 tons at the Bank of England in London," a bank official told AFP. (Tunisia's central bank insists gold stocks unchanged)

~~

On 11 November 2010, the spooky Guardian was preparing us for change in Tunisia.

Tunisia, our supposedly stable 'friend'.


~~

TUNISIA R.I.P. - THE CIA'S JASMINE REVOLUTION

Mohamed Bouazizi. He "set himself on fire outside the governor’s office". ( Mohamed Bouazizi.) Or he "set fire to himself at the bus station." "He had apparently decided to go to Tunis and talk to the president... (he) arrived at the bus station." (Tunisian riot town stands firm in its fury) He had no money for the bus but he had money to buy a can of petrol?
Mohamed Bouazizi still alive? s


suki reminds us of what Christopher Hitchens wrote about Tunisia:

"In the 2006–7 World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Report, it was ranked No. 1 in Africa for economic competitiveness, even, incidentally, outpacing three European states (Italy, Greece, and Portugal).

"Home ownership is 80 percent.

"Life expectancy, the highest on the continent, is 72.

"Less than 4 percent of the population is below the poverty line, and the alleviation of misery by a 'solidarity fund' has been adopted by the United Nations as a model program.

"Nine out of 10 households are connected to electricity and clean water.

CIA slogan in Tunisia, January 1011

"Tunisia is the first African state to have been accepted as an associate member of the European Union.

"Its Code of Personal Status was the first in the Arab world to abolish polygamy, and the veil and the burka are never seen...

"More than 40 percent of the judges and lawyers are female...

"The combination of stylish females, excellent food, clean streets, smart-looking traffic cops, and cheap and efficient taxis made me feel I was in a place more upscale than many European recreational resorts and spas.

(http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2007/07/hitchens200707)

Tunisia's economy has been doing better than most!

So, who does not like Tunisia?

1985 - Israel launched an attack against the PLO headquarters near Tunis. There were casualties among Tunisian civilian bystanders.

"Bourguiba significantly downscaled relations with the United States.

1987 - Prime Minister Zine El Abidine Ben Ali became president in a coup d'etat. He declared President Habib Bourguiba "impeached on medical grounds".

2000 - President Ben Ali broke all diplomatic ties with Israel

2009 - Tunisia signed an economic and technical cooperation pact with China

2009 - Sakhr El Materi, chairman of the Tunisia-US Parliamentary Friendship Group, met the US ambassador at Materi's home (Tunisia: Dinner With Sakher El Materi - TuniLeaks) "The Ambassador raised economic liberalization, noting the importance of opening up to franchising."

2010 - A report (Transformation: Tunisia) notes: "Despite the formal abolition of trade barriers for industrial goods with the European Union as of 1 January 2008, in practice, Tunisia has seen too little progress in terms of trade liberalization."

May 2010 - General William E. Ward, commander of U.S. Africa Command, visited Tunisia and met Tunisian Minister of Defense Ridha Grira.

"Minister Grira had recently returned from very positive talks in Washington with Secretary of Defense Robert Gates." (Tunisia - U.S. Africa Command Blog)

October 2010 - Sakhr El Materi, chairman of the Tunisia-US Parliamentary Friendship Group, had talks with top Americans in the Pentagon and the State Department.

November 2010 - A cable from the US embassy in Tunis released by wikileaks describes Tunisia's President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali's family entourage as a "quasi Mafia" because of its "organized corruption".

Mohamed Bouazizi. He "set himself on fire outside the governor’s office". ( Mohamed Bouazizi.) Or he "set fire to himself at the bus station." "He had apparently decided to go to Tunis and talk to the president... (he) arrived at the bus station." (Tunisian riot town stands firm in its fury )

17 December - Mohamed Bouazizi, a 26-year-old university graduate, reportedly set himself alight in the central Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid in a protest over unemployment.

He reportedly died on January 5 from burn wounds.

In Islam, suicide is considered a sin.

There have been rumours that Mohamed Bouazizi is still alive s

24 December 2010 - an important Washington think tank (Institute for Policy Studiesa) had an article about a possible change of regime in Tunisia (Foreign Policy In Focus.):

"It would do Tunisians, even (Tunisian President) Ben Ali, well to recall how many US allies different American administrations have discarded…"

7 January 2011 - the Council on Foreign Relations's Elliott Abrams (Elliott Abrams: Is Tunisia Next?) seems to suggest that the fall of Ben Ali would be a good thing.

"Tunisians are clearly sick of looking at all the giant photos and paintings of Ben Ali that appear on walls, posters, and billboards all over the country...

"If Tunisia can move toward democracy, Algerians and Egyptians and even Libyans will wonder why they cannot."

8-10 January - More people die in three days of rioting.

Mysterious rooftop snipers are at work.

13 January - The army withdraws from Tunis, which remains occupied by special forces.

The leaders of the North African branch of Al-Qaeda/the CIA call for the overthrow of Ben Ali.

14 January
- Ben Ali leaves the country.

Think of the CIA's Operation Gladio

15 January - TUNISIA R.I.P.

"Ben Ali ... gave you security. Now that he's gone, look at the destruction," said Mohamed, a worker in a transport company as he surveyed a looted and burnt out appliances shop. (President's exile leaves security vacuum)

"The main train station in Tunis has been torched, while gunfire was heard as soldiers intervened in attempts to stop looting in the city...

"The Reuters news agency reported that squads of men in civilian clothes were driving through Tunis at high speed, shooting randomly at buildings and people." (Army on streets amid Tunisia unrest)

"In the capital of Tunis and other areas of the country, residents reported knife-wielding and balaclava-clad gangs attacking apartments and homes.

"Organised groups were said to be attacking shops, hospitals and factories.

"Many had piled into stolen hire cars and careered around the city and suburbs, stopping only to smash and burn." (Gang violence mars celebration of Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution)

"The feel is very much that of a military takeover. It's hard to catch a whiff of what is being called the Jasmine Revolution." (Wedeman: Tunisia's military putting boot on 'Jasmine Revolution')

Michael Bloomberg

There is an argument that because the Ben Ali family are multi-millionaires they should be toppled

Here is a list of some politicians who are multi-millionaires:

Canadian Prime minister paul Martin Paul Martin - $225 million

UK prime minister David Cameron - $30 million.

New Zealand prime minister John Key - $37 million

Mayor of New York Michael R. Bloomberg - $18 billion

The President of South korea Lee Myung-bak - $23.6 million

Argentine president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner - $12.92 million

Barack Obama - $10.1 million

Nicolas Sarkozy - $3 million

Singapore Premier Lee Hsien Loong has a salary of $2.05 million per year.

Thailand's King Bhumibol - US$30 billion.

The UK's Queen Elizabeth - $450 million.

Italy's Silvio Berlusconi - $6.5 billion

President of Chile Sebastián Piñera - $2.2 billion

Prime Minister of lebanon Saad Hariri - $1.9 billion

1 % of the world population own 40 % of the global assets. The richest 2 % of the world population own more than 51 % of the global assets, the richest 10 % own 85 % of the global assets.