Video message to Barack Obama
We all remember what the French President Nicolas Sarkozy declared, in his victory speech, shortly after winning the French presidential election in 2007:
I want to issue a call to everyone in the world who believes in the values of tolerance, freedom, democracy, humanism, to all those who are persecuted by tyranny, by dictatorships [...] I want to tell them that it will be France’s pride and its duty to be at their side. [...] France will be on the side of the oppressed of the world. This is France’s message, it is France’s identity, it is France’s history.
Election promises and sweet talks are notable for often being broken once a politician is in office. We will never forget the lie peddled by Nicholas Sarkosy on his second official visit to Tunisia (April 2008) : “Today, the sphere of liberties [in Tunisia] is progressing (…) I have complete confidence in your will to continue to enlarge the space of freedom in Tunisia.” Not a single word about human rights violations in Tunisia!
Last year I wrote a blog post about how France voted for Ben Ali and how it was accordingly to the traditional “Politique Africaine” of France.
This year, I’m wondering whether under the leadership of Barack Abama, the United States, who enjoys good relations with Tunisia, a country praised as “a counterterrorism ally”, will change its policy? Will Barack Obama have the ability to create better foreign policies based on ideals and respect, and not based on self-interest and safety? Can he stop US assistance to repressive regimes, “soft” dictators and “moderate Arab regimes”?




Jillian C. York 3:09 pm on January 26, 2009 Permalink |
Very nicely done, Sami!
Chagra 4:43 pm on January 26, 2009 Permalink |
belle video ya sami (celle D’obama) …mais juste une petite remarque et permettez moi de rectifier : le mot “few” en anglais est different de ‘a few’. few = peu de …donc chwaya alors que ‘a few’ = quelques …let me illustrate: 1-I have a few questions to ask. 2- few members attended so we cancelled the meeting. donc il fallait utiliser ‘a few’ dans la sequence video…(excuse my english teacher’s natural reaction) .have a good time
Mariam Ayyash 12:35 pm on January 27, 2009 Permalink |
we first have to ask ourselves, what is his interest in defending the oppressed in the Arab world? you do understand that Tunisia is part of a land that is sitting in the most sacred, more strategic and wealthiest in the world today, and it contains people with a very distant history of nobility only few cultures share them that heritage, they are probably jealous over there! imagine if the oppressed gain power, where would that leave the hungry-to-power USA!
Sami Ben Gharbia 12:53 pm on January 27, 2009 Permalink |
@Jillian, thanks!
@Chagra, merci cher ami, j’ai vraiment pas fait attention à ça, bien que j’ai croisé cette information. sur le Net. Trops tard pour éditer la vidéo, faut faire avec.
@Mariam, I don’t ask them to defend the oppressed, I just ask them to stop their assistance to our oppressors. The battle for freedom is our own battle, and we will have to fight it ourselves and no one else is going to fight it for us.
eleega al-masry 7:49 pm on February 9, 2009 Permalink |
Dope. You were on my mind today so I thought I’d drop by to see what you were up to.
Come illumine the balad again soon, on vacation ba2a.
MOhAMED 9:58 pm on February 22, 2009 Permalink |
salut.