From Jihad Watch:
Tunisia: Security forces clash with "radical Islamists"
Remember when the "radical Islamists" were supposed to be a marginal, Tiny Minority of Extremists? We do. That's when we tried to tell you.
Sharia is a package deal, as even Imam Rauf knows. As a total (and totalitarian) system of governance for every aspect of life, there can always be more of it to enforce. Someone will always demand more Sharia, and be willing to kill and topple governments to enforce it, all the more where the declaration of an Islamic state has tied the right to rule to Islamic piety. It is an Achilles' heel built into Sharia itself, and a perpetual source of instability.
"Security forces clash with radical Islamists in Tunisian town," from Al Arabiya, February 23:
Police in a Tunisian town used tear gas on Thursday to break up a crowd of about 200 hardline Islamists, armed with sticks, swords and petrol bombs, who set fire to a police station, witnesses told Reuters.
“The security forces are chasing about 200 Salafists armed with swords and sticks after an exchange of petrol bombs and tear gas,” resident Omar Inoubli told Reuters by telephone from Jandouba, about 160 km (99 miles) west of the capital.
“These groups set fire to a police station .... (They) are broadcasting recordings through the loudspeakers of mosques calling for jihad (holy war).”
Residents said the clashes broke out when police arrested a Salafist but tensions had been brewing between authorities and the conservative Islamists who have become more active since last year’s revolution.
“The situation has become serious in the city, which has been living in a state of terror and fear because of Salafist groups seeking to impose a strict way of life,” another witness, a woman who did not want to be named, told Reuters.
One resident said the Salafis had threatened people drinking alcohol and slapped women wearing trousers or skirts.
Tunisia became the birthplace of the ‘Arab Spring’ uprisings just over a year ago when a wave of protests forced long-standing secularist leader Zine ElAbidine Ben Ali to flee the country.
After the revolution, measures outlawing Islamists were abolished, and a moderate Islamist movement, Ennahda, was elected to lead a coalition government.
The Salafists, who represent a small minority of Tunisians, have profited from the new freedoms. They have attacked brothels, bars and cinemas showing films they consider to be morally suspect, and staged protests to demand an end to mixed-gender classes at universities.
While many renounce violence, some have been linked to al-Qaeda’s north African branch.
The Salafists represent an awkward problem for Tunisia's Islamist-led government.
Ennahda does not share their hardline views [how sure are we? -ed.] but if it cracks down on them, it risks alienating some of its more conservative supporters. As a result, it has been accused by secularist opponents of being too soft on the group.
Posted by Marisol on February 24, 2012 8:12 AM
Tunisia: Security forces clash with "radical Islamists"
Remember when the "radical Islamists" were supposed to be a marginal, Tiny Minority of Extremists? We do. That's when we tried to tell you.
Sharia is a package deal, as even Imam Rauf knows. As a total (and totalitarian) system of governance for every aspect of life, there can always be more of it to enforce. Someone will always demand more Sharia, and be willing to kill and topple governments to enforce it, all the more where the declaration of an Islamic state has tied the right to rule to Islamic piety. It is an Achilles' heel built into Sharia itself, and a perpetual source of instability.
"Security forces clash with radical Islamists in Tunisian town," from Al Arabiya, February 23:
Police in a Tunisian town used tear gas on Thursday to break up a crowd of about 200 hardline Islamists, armed with sticks, swords and petrol bombs, who set fire to a police station, witnesses told Reuters.
“The security forces are chasing about 200 Salafists armed with swords and sticks after an exchange of petrol bombs and tear gas,” resident Omar Inoubli told Reuters by telephone from Jandouba, about 160 km (99 miles) west of the capital.
“These groups set fire to a police station .... (They) are broadcasting recordings through the loudspeakers of mosques calling for jihad (holy war).”
Residents said the clashes broke out when police arrested a Salafist but tensions had been brewing between authorities and the conservative Islamists who have become more active since last year’s revolution.
“The situation has become serious in the city, which has been living in a state of terror and fear because of Salafist groups seeking to impose a strict way of life,” another witness, a woman who did not want to be named, told Reuters.
One resident said the Salafis had threatened people drinking alcohol and slapped women wearing trousers or skirts.
Tunisia became the birthplace of the ‘Arab Spring’ uprisings just over a year ago when a wave of protests forced long-standing secularist leader Zine ElAbidine Ben Ali to flee the country.
After the revolution, measures outlawing Islamists were abolished, and a moderate Islamist movement, Ennahda, was elected to lead a coalition government.
The Salafists, who represent a small minority of Tunisians, have profited from the new freedoms. They have attacked brothels, bars and cinemas showing films they consider to be morally suspect, and staged protests to demand an end to mixed-gender classes at universities.
While many renounce violence, some have been linked to al-Qaeda’s north African branch.
The Salafists represent an awkward problem for Tunisia's Islamist-led government.
Ennahda does not share their hardline views [how sure are we? -ed.] but if it cracks down on them, it risks alienating some of its more conservative supporters. As a result, it has been accused by secularist opponents of being too soft on the group.
Posted by Marisol on February 24, 2012 8:12 AM
No comments:
Post a Comment