Tunisia allows ex-dictator Ben Ali to be buried at home

Fri, Sep 20, 2019
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Foreign

The Tunisian government on Friday said it would allow the country’s late autocrat Zine-Abidine Ben-Ali to be buried in his homeland after his death in exile in Saudi Arabia.

Ben Ali died on Thursday at a Saudi hospital at the age of 83, according to his lawyer.

A 2011 popular revolt had forced Ben Ali to flee to Saudi Arabia.

“The government will respond to a request for burying the ex-president in Tunisia in case his family asks for this,” an unnamed source in the government told Tunisia’s state news agency TAP late Thursday.

“The government will work to ensure that the funeral arrangements will be conducted under the best circumstances,” the source said.

There has been no comment from Ben Ali’s family.

Before his death, he had asked to be buried in the Saudi holy city of Mecca, according to Tunisia media.

There has been yet no official word in Saudi Arabia about his funeral.

Earlier this month, Ben Ali was admitted to a hospital in Saudi Arabia due to an unspecified illness.

He governed Tunisia for 23 years, and his tenure was marred by massive human rights abuses and a draconian crackdown on dissent.

Ben Ali’s death came days after Tunisia held its second democratic presidential election since his ouster.

Tunisia was the birthplace of the 2010 to 2011 Arab Spring Revolts that also saw the toppling of dictators in Egypt, Libya and Yemen. (NAN)

-Sep 20, 2019 @12:24 GMT |

Tags:


No fewer than 20 children killed in Pakistan airstrikes : UN

THE United Nations in Afghanistan on Thursday confirmed  that it received credible reports that dozens of civilians, including women and...

Read More
Koreans, Nigerians celebrate 2024 Nobel Prize laureate, Han Kang

KOREANS and Nigerians in Federal Capital Territory (FCT), on  Friday  celebrated Korean literary icon, Han Kang, for winning the 2024  Nobel...

Read More
Morocco accelerates regionalisation process with 4 new agreements

TANGIER (Morocco), Dec. 21, 2024 (NAN) The Kingdom of Morocco’s 12 regions and several ministerial departments, have signed four framework...

Read More