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Archive for Bassam Bounenni

Chercheur tunisien en géopolitique et journaliste à la chaine d'information satellitaire Al Jazeera

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Diplomatie de droit de réponse


Il est un pays où il est préférable de ne jamais en parler, même pas dans un petit encadré dans la page “Nécrologie”. Il s’agit bel et bien de notre chère Tunisie.
Les rédactions du monde entier, plus précisément celles qui se respectent, essaient un tant soit peu d’éviter de parler de la chronique politique de [...]


14Dec2009 | Bassam Bounenni | 14 comments | Continued
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The thwarted Tunisian right of return


Held in Geneva in late June, the conference of the International Association of Tunisian Expatriates (IATE) provoked the ire of the Tunisian authorities. Several human-rights activists and lawyers were intimidated or assaulted by plainclothes police at the Tunis-Carthage airport just for having attended the Geneva meeting and backing the basic rights of hundreds of exiled Tunisians to return home.


13Jul2009 | Bassam Bounenni | 1 comment | Continued
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Dictatorship, Tunisia’s undeserved fate


At a press conference on May 4, Naji Bghouri, the head of the National Syndicate of Tunisian Journalists (SNJT), was prevented by pro-government journalists from finishing comments in which he mentioned of declining press freedoms in Tunisia. The episode showed that the regime of President Zine al-Abedine ben Ali had lost patience even with a body that it had helped establish in January 2008 to cut the grass out from under the feet of the country’s most critical journalists.


18May2009 | Bassam Bounenni | 0 comments | Continued
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Use the information summit to pressure the Tunisian authorities


The choice of Tunisia to host the November 16-18 second World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) has provoked much controversy. The idea behind the summit is to bridge the gap between rich and poor countries in a field that has proven to be one of the focal points of present and future progress. Tunisia, however, excels neither in informatics and rel [...].

23Oct2005 | Bassam Bounenni | 0 comments | Continued
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