Abbès Mohsen

Abbès Mohsen (born 25 October 1945) is a Tunisian politician.

Abbès Mohsen
Mayor of Tunis
In office
2000–2010
Preceded byMohamed Ali Bouleymane
Succeeded byMohamed Béji Ben Mami
Provincial governor (Tunis region) 1st period
In office
March 1978  May 1980
Provincial governor (Tunis region) 2nd period
In office
December 1986  June 1988
Tunisian Ambassador to Yemen
In office
1992–1995
Tunisian Ambassador to Brazil
In office
1997–2000
Tunisian Ambassador to the Netherlands
In office
2010–2011
Personal details
Born25 October 1945
Tunis
Political partyRCD
Spouse(s)Y
Children3s

Between 2008 and 2011 he was a member of his country's ruling Democratic Constitutional Rally (RCD / Rassemblement constitutionnel démocratique) (political party) Central Committee. He has also served, between 2000 and 2010, as the Mayor of Tunis.[1]

Since the Tunisian Revolution of 2010/2011 Mohsen has attempted to continue with his public career, although membership of the Tunis political establishment under the previous regime has given rise to some political hostility.[1]

Biography

Family background

Abbès Mohsen was born into a leading Tunisian family of Cherif provenance, which has also provided a line of imams to Al-Zaytuna Mosque. He is son to Zine el-Abidine Mohsen, Qaid-governor and himself son of Grand Imam Mahmoud Mohsen and of Zohra, daughter of Habib Djellouli, a leading politician in Tunisia during the middle years of the 20th century.[2]

Early years

He obtained his Baccalauréat at the Lycée Francais de Mutuelleville (as it was then known).[3] He is a qualified lawyer and an alumnus of the Tunisian ENA (École nationale d'administration). At the age of just 30 he became the first governor of Bizerte and then, in 1976, the youngest ever governor of Nabeul (le Cap Bon).

Political career

Mohsen became governor-president for the important Tunis district in 1978. Two years later he was appointed Special Advisor to the First Minister. In 1981 he was appointed head of the Tunisian Hotels and Tourism association. In 1983 he became Director General for Local Collectives at the Tunisian Interior Ministry and then in 1986, for a second stint, governor-president for the Tunis district.

During the later 1980s his career increasingly took him into national politics. He was appointed Director General of Protocol to the President in 1988 and Project Leader for the Interior Ministry the following year, responsible for conferences at the ENA between 1989 and 1992. In 1992 he was sent to Yemen as his country's ambassador, returning, after three years in 1995. He now became permanent secretary to the country's ruling Democratic Constitutional Rally (RCD party / Rassemblement constitutionnel démocratique), a position he retained till 1997 when he accepted a post as the Tunisian ambassador to Brazil.

In 2000 he was appointed Mayor of Tunis by decree: he was reappointed to the post in May 2005 on the basis of municipal elections. During this period he became secretary general of the International Association of Francophone Mayors.[4] At the turbulent RCD Party Congress in July/August 2008 he became a member of the Party Central Committee. On 11 January 2010 the president sacked Mohsen as mayor of Tunis and he was replaced by Mohamed Béji Ben Mami who was already a member of the city council.[5] The official Tunis Africa Press agency report gave no explanation for the sacking, but press speculation elsewhere indicated that it resulted from a refusal by Mohsen to reply to journalists from the Tuinisian Channel 7 television programme El Hak Maâk who had asked about a litigation involving municipal service provision.[6]

Abbès Mohsen received a further ambassadorial appointment, this time as theTunisian ambassador to the Netherlands, on 27 October 2010.[7]

On 28 August 2014 his name was at the top of a unified candidate list issued by the Destourian Movement and the National Destourian Initiative - effectively an update and relaunch by elements of the old centrist RCD party - to contest First electoral district of Tunis in the Legislative election of October 2014.[8] The former Destourians came ninth in the election, with a vote share that entitled them to three seats in the national legislative assembly.

Recognition

Abbès Mohsen has received numerous awards and honours during his career. These include the Order of Independence and the Order of the Republic. Beyond Tunisia his various awards include the Grand Cross of the order of Brasilia and the Grand Cross of the Order of Rio Branco. He is a commander of the Legion of Honour and of the Order of Merit in Italy.

References

  1. Elodie Auffray (25 October 2014). "Les ex-bénalistes entrent dans le jeu démocratique". Le Temps SA, Lausanne & Zuerich. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
  2. Arnold H. Green, The Tunisian ulama. 1873-1915. Social structure and response to ideological currents, éd. Brill Archive, Leyde, 1978, p. 272
  3. Patrick Cabanel (compiler). Une France en Méditerranée : écoles, langue et culture françaises (19th-20th centuries). Créaphis, Paris, 2006. p. 200. ISBN 978-2-913610-83-5.
  4. (in French) Réunion de l'Observatoire international de l'état civil à Tunis du 4 au 6 septembre 2007 (Association internationale des maires francophones) Archived June 23, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  5. Noureddine HLAOUI (12 January 2010). "Municipalité de Tunis - Mohamed Béji Ben Mami succède à Abbès Mohsen". Business News, Cité Ennasr II, Tunis. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
  6. (in French) « Tunisie : le maire de Tunis évincé pour déficit de communication », Agence France-Presse, 12 janvier 2010 Archived January 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  7. "Abbès Mohsen, ... et ..., reçoivent leurs lettres de créance d'ambassadeurs de Tunisie à La Haye, ... et ... ". "Leaders" (PR Factory, Ennour Building, Cité des Sciences - BP 200 - 1082 Tunis - Tunisie). 27 October 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
  8. (in French) « Le Mouvement destourien dévoile ses têtes de liste pour les élections législatives », Business News, 28 août 2014
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