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Ben Ali: Tunisia’s ousted ex-president dies in exile aged 83

Tunisia’s former President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali has died in exile aged 83, his family says.

Ben Ali led the country for 23 years and was credited with delivering stability and some economic prosperity.

But he received widespread criticism for suppressing political freedoms and for widespread corruption.

In 2011, he was forced from office following mass street protests. This triggered a wave of similar uprisings across the Arab world.

At least half a dozen countries in the region saw their president fall or conflicts break out in the wake of the former Tunisian leader’s downfall, in what became known as the Arab Spring.

Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia when he left office and was living there when he died on Thursday.

His funeral will take place on Friday in Saudi Arabia, his lawyer told Reuters news agency.

Tunisia’s autocratic former president brought stability but little freedom to the country.

He came to power in 1987, ousting Habib Bourguiba to become Tunisia’s second-ever president. He promised reform, democracy, women’s rights and education.

But he failed to deliver a more free and open society.

In a diplomatic cable published by Wikileaks, a US ambassador described how the Ben Ali family was widely viewed as a “quasi-mafia”. It spoke of a “nexus of corruption” which bled the country dry.

And while he did bring some economic growth, no-one was really fooled by his three consecutive “99.9%” election victories.

His strict control of society shored up by a vast network of spies, informers and secret police kept Ben Ali in power. But in the end anger against that obsessive control proved to be his undoing.

He acted too slowly to stem the tide of that unexpected popular uprising.

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