While Facebook is usually used to post news and snapshots of everyday life, Tunisians have made it a major political arena. Citizens and politicians debate and frolic there all day long. It is also by a simple Facebook post that President Kaïs Saïed notified the extension of the freeze of the Assembly to his fellow citizens.
From our correspondent in Tunis,
It is a discipline that Tunisians practice in high doses and which has no equal to ensure the tone of their ten fingers. Compulsively, many of them share their opinions, analyzes or political rants.
Rym El Ghid Souid, dentist by profession, is a follower of this practice. “ Sometimes I post a status every hour since July 25. It’s compulsive indeed, she admits. During the revolution, at the beginning, we were euphoric because we really believed that there was going to be change. Then we saw our country fall back into the same ways as before and the desire to do or say things faded a little. This desire is coming back today because what is happening in the country is not trivial. Hope is reborn. »
Rym is one of those Tunisians who believe that by freezing the Assembly, President Kaïs Saïed has rid Tunisia of a corrupt political class and working only to keep it in power. Decisive positions that earn him frequent clashes with Internet users who disagree with his analysis.