Anouar Jamaoui
A Tunisian academic and researcher at the Center of Research and Studies on Dialogue of Civilisations and Comparative Religions, in Sousse, Tunisia. He obtained the Arab award for social and human sciences from the Arab Center for Research and Policies Studies in Doha in 2012, for research entitled Arabisation of the technical term: a critical review on the Arabic modern-lexical surveyAmong the dilemmas Tunisia has been suffering is financial corruption which destroyed economy, burdened the people, widened the gap -under dictatorship- between the Haves and the Have-nots and accelerated the revolt against the mafia and the symbols of corruption in the country. The slogans of the revolution included promoting equitable development, establishing justice to the oppressed and putting the thieves on trial. Five years have passed since the dictator –Zine Al-Abidine Ben Ali- fled the country(January 14, 2011), yet the politicians’s viewpoints concerning the corruption dossier are still split: a sharp debate over the economic reconciliation bill, submitted by the President Beji Caied Essebsi (March 20, 2015) and consented by the Council of Ministers (July 14, 2015), took place.