News
Google News: Nahda to reach out to Tunisian secular rivals
[Financial Times] - In the first free vote in the Arab spring which was launched in Tunisia, Nahda, the party repressed for decades by the ousted regime of Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, claimed on Tuesday to have secured an absolute majority of seats in
Reporting the Arab Spring: 'These stories will go on and on'
www.journalism.co.uk
[Journalism.co.uk] began on 17 February; his was the first crew to enter Benghazi when he was travelling with anti-Gaddafi fighters; and he was on a plane to Tunisia when news came through that the country's former president, Zine el Abedine ben Ali, had resigned.
Tunisia's Jewish community cautious over what lies ahead
www.independent.co.uk
[The Independent] - Ben Ali, for all his corruption and abuses, maintained the Tunisian rulers' tradition of safeguarding the Jewish community. “If the situation remains OK, we can continue to live freely and happily,” says Bismuth. Earlier this year, a small crowd
Google News: The birds versus the dictators
[Cream] - Three posters, emulating the style of the original Birds movie posters, feature Gaddafi, Mubarak and Ben Ali. Online social networks played a significant role in spreading revolutions in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya earlier in
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