Tunisians Await Murder Trial Verdict for Former President Ben Ali
A military court is set to hand down a verdict for ousted strongman Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, charged over the deaths of 22 anti-government protesters during Tunisia’s January 2011 revolution.
Living in exile in Saudi Arabia, Ben Ali is being tried in absentia along with 22 co-accused, including two former interior ministers, for the killings in the northwestern towns of Thala and Kasserine.
The court has been mulling the verdict for the past week after a six-month trial that has embittered the victims’ families, convinced they will never know the truth about the killings.
Ben Ali, who ruled Tunisia for 23 years, faces the death penalty for voluntary homicide or complicity in the deaths, while the military prosecutor has requested “the toughest penalties possible” — life imprisonment, according to lawyers — for his co-defendants.
The victims’ families and their supporters say the trial of the exiled Ben Ali is no more than a smokescreen, a populist ploy aimed at veiling the truth and appeasing the plaintiffs.
They fear the truth will never come out about who gave the orders to fire on demonstrators in a crackdown that left some 600 wounded in addition to the 22 dead.