Tunisians hated Ex- President's wife even more.

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Downfall of Ben Ali’s Corrupt In-Laws Met With Praise by Ordinary Tunisians
Elaine Ganley & Jenny Barchfield | January 19, 2011

Tunisians could not stand her even more than they could not stand him.


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A man carrying goods from the house of Belhassen Trabelsi, the brother of the former president's wife, Leila Ben Ali, near the capital Tunis on Saturday. Tunisians could not stand Leila even more than they could not stand her husband. (AP Photo/Hassene Dridi)

The end of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s iron-fisted, 23-year rule brought joy to many ordinary people in this North African nation — and they were especially elated at the prospect of life without his wife and her rapacious family.

The clan of former first lady Leila Trabelsi, a one-time hairdresser who rose to become Tunisia’s most influential woman, was widely despised as the ultimate symbol of corruption and excess.

Leila and her 10 siblings are said to have operated like a mafia, extorting money from shop owners, demanding a stake in businesses large and small, and divvying up plum concessions among themselves.

Their control over the North African country’s economy was vast. The Trabelsi and Ben Ali families were said to have a stake in Tunisian banks and airlines, car dealerships, Internet providers, radio and television stations, industry and retailers.

And when mass protests forced Ben Ali to flee last week to Saudi Arabia, his peoples’ pent-up rage was directed more at Leila’s side of the family than at her husband and his authoritarian regime.

Retribution was swift. Within a day of Ben Ali’s departure, many of the sumptuous villas and businesses belonging to the Trabelsis were pillaged and burned, and some reports said one prominent family member was killed by an angry mob.

A Tunis Air pilot who refused to take off with five fleeing family members on board has become a national hero.

A branch of Zeitouna Bank in Tunis founded by Ben Ali’s son-in-law was torched, as were vehicles made by the car brands he distributed, including Kia, Fiat and Porsche.

The Trabelsis “are thieves, tricksters and even killers,” raged Tunis resident Mantasser Ben Mabrouk. “Their only goal was to make money in whatever way they could.”

His friend, Mohamed Gaddahi, agreed, laying — as many here do — much of the blame for the regime’s abuses squarely on the Trabelsis. “The president did lots of good, but the family did lots of harm to Tunisia,” he said.

A lack of jobs in this highly educated nation fueled the month of popular protests that toppled Ben Ali. The uprising began in December after a despairing university graduate who sold fruits and vegetables without a permit set himself on fire and died because police confiscated his goods.

The co-author of a book on Leila Trabelsi, “The Regent of Carthage,” says the Trabelsis played an “absolutely capital” role in the fall of the regime.

“Tunisians were absolutely aware of what they were up to and they got to a point where they were sick and tired of their behavior,” author Catherine Graciet said. Still, she noted that “we can’t put all the blame on the Trabelsis, because it was Ben Ali himself who allowed them to act that way.”

Leila Trabelsi was born in 1957 — the fifth of 11 children of a dried fruits vendor and a housewife, according to Graciet’s book.

After working as a hairdresser and having a short-lived first marriage, Trabelsi married Ben Ali in 1992, five years after the bloodless palace coup in which he replaced aging independence hero Habib Bourguiba as president.

The marriage — which was also Ben Ali’s second — catapulted the once-modest Trabelsi clan to national prominence.

Her oldest brother, Belhassen, known as the clan chieftain, is said to have ruled over the family’s many mafia-style rackets.

Her nephew, Imed Trabelsi, was reputed to be the spoiled brat of the family and the former first lady’s favorite, according to the book. Known as a playboy, he enjoyed a jet-set lifestyle, complete with a garage full of sports cars and yachts.

French prosecutors suspected him and another of Leila Trabelsi’s nephews of having ordered the 2006 theft of a yacht belonging to a French investment banker that turned up in the Tunisian port of Sidi Bou Said. Still, a French judge ruled that the two Trabelsis could be tried at home, despite the fact that Tunisia was ruled by their uncle. It was not clear if any trial was ever held in Tunisia.

Some Tunisian media reports said Imed Trabelsi was recognized at the Tunis airport as he attempted to flee the country hours after the regime crumbled — and was attacked by an angry mob. Conflicting reports said he was stabbed by a fisherman in the town where he was mayor, an upscale coastal town near the capital. He reportedly died from his wounds at a Tunis military hospital over the weekend.

Associated Press
 
Prophetic words from the [COLOR="_______"]Wikileaks[/COLOR] :

"Corruption in the inner circle is growing. Even average Tunisians are now keenly aware of it, and the chorus of complaints is rising. Tunisians intensely dislike, even hate, first lady Leila Trabelsi and her family. In private, regime opponents mock her; even those close to the government express dismay at her reported behaviour. Meanwhile, anger is growing at Tunisia's high unemployment and regional inequities. As a consequence, the risks to the regime's long-term stability are increasing."


The WikiLeaks cable that by many accounts helped encourage the protests that have now toppled the Ben Ali regime had the virtue of being honest, as it explained that the incredibly deep and endemic corruption up through the very top of a regime that had completely lost touch with the people produced an untenable situation.
 
Prophetic words from the [COLOR="_______"]Wikileaks[/COLOR] :


The WikiLeaks cable that by many accounts helped encourage the protests that have now toppled the Ben Ali regime had the virtue of being honest, as it explained that the incredibly deep and endemic corruption up through the very top of a regime that had completely lost touch with the people produced an untenable situation.

The Newest WikiLeaks Problem: Unredacted Cables
BY Neal UngerleiderFri Jan 14, 2011

Despite the best efforts of the State Department and media titans such as The New York Times, unredacted WikiLeaks cables appear to be making their way across the internet.

Information wants to be free and that, apparently, even applies to censored portions of WikiLeaks. Unredacted versions of censored WikiLeaks cables appear to be quietly (and widely) disseminating through the torrentsphere, conventional websites, and the murky subculture of conspiracy- and cryptography-oriented websites. Meanwhile, a controversial Russian figure associated with WikiLeaks has announced his intent to release further unredacted cables to the web.

The leaked diplomatic cables currently available through both the primary WikiLeaks website and its mirrors and through journalistic partners such as The Guardian and Der Spiegel go through a process of editing before formal release to the public. In an interview with NPR's Terry Gross, The New York Times' David Sanger described a process in which his newspaper and its lawyers weighed both the ramifications of publishing national security information before reproducing some of the cables and the need to put information in context for readers.

Other media outlets presumably go through similar processes as well. According to Harvard University's Jonathan Zittrain, “WikiLeaks is currently relying on the expertise of the five news organizations [who have access to the cables] to redact the cables as they are released, and is following their redactions as it releases the documents on its website."

That leaves a lot of redacted cables.
 
heng ah.. for a moment i thought i was the one being hated. :p
 

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Leila Trabelsi (R), and his daughter, Halima​
 
Can someone put up Ho Chings picture:confused:

I want to compare Spores version with the Tuna version:D
 
Wonder what happened to Halima?

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...e-fled-with-60m-in-gold-bullion-2187035.html#

The Tunisian job: How president's wife 'fled with $60m in gold bullion'
The final act of the kleptocracy by the Ben Ali family was to steal one and a half tonnes of gold, with the president's wife personally collecting the bullion from an initially reluctant but eventually browbeaten president of the country's central bank.
Within hours the allegations – denied by the central bank – had been turned into slogans on the streets of Tunis in another demonstration, as protesters vented their fury at the former first family. "Hang them all, but let's get our gold back first," shouted a group marching along Avenue Bourguiba.
This may not be easy. Whereas Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali is now a guest of Saudi Arabia, supposedly in the same neighbourhood of Jeddah which once hosted another fallen African strongman, Idi Amin, the whereabouts of his spouse, Leila Trabelsi, is unclear. Some Tunisians say that Dubai, where she would go on shopping expeditions, is the destination, others say it is one of the central Asian republics.
The account of 53-year-old Ms Trabelsi's great bank robbery, which netted an estimated £37.5m ($60m), came from the French secret service after the Finance Minister, Christine Lagarde, announced in Paris that movement of money from the former colony was under surveillance.
Ms Trabelsi, according to French security officials, went to the Bank of Tunisia on Friday with a small group of her staff and demanded that the gold be handed over to her office for safekeeping. When the bank president refused, a telephone call was said to have come from the president ordering that the handover should take place.
A few hours later the couple flew out of the country, with Mr Ben Ali deciding against delivering a valedictory speech. The jet initially headed for France, but, it is claimed, was diverted to Saudi Arabia after President Nicolas Sarkozy refused permission to land.
The account was yesterday denied by the central bank, which said that the former first leader had never set foot in the bank. The official in charge of payments "had never received verbal or written orders to take out gold or currency," the bank spokesman Zied Mouhli told the BBC. "The gold reserves have not moved for years."

Meanwhile, two of the former president's daughters arrived in Disneyland, near Paris, to seek asylum. Nesrine, who, with her husband, Sakhr, had kept a pet tiger, moved with her sister Halima into a series of suites at the Castle Club hotel with a retinue of servants and bodyguards. According to reports they left after being told by the French government that their presence was not welcome.
 
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