Mohsen Marzouk

Mohsen Marzouk
محسن مرزوق
Personal details
Born July 1965
Sfax, Tunisia
Nationality Tunisian
Political party Nidaa Tounes

Mohsen Marzouk (Arabic: محسن مرزوق; born in July 1965 in Sfax) is a Tunisian politician. He holds a degree in Political sociology and International Relations from the International Studies Association in Tunis.

Early life

Mohsen Marzouk was born in July 1965 and raised in a poor working-class neighborhood in the city of Sfax. At fourteen, he was expelled from his school for his oppositional political activities. He however managed to reenter and finish high school in Sfax.[1]

At the University of Tunis Marzouk was a leading student activist. In 1987, while still enrolled, he was arrested by Tunisia's secret police. He was interrogated and tortured for many days before being sent to a labor camp in the southern desert of Tunisia.[1]

When he was allowed to return, Marzouk remained politically active. He worked towards reinstating the General Union of Tunisian Students (UGET)[1] which after the Bourguiba's death and Ben Ali's rise to power became deeply divided over its further political course.[2] Marzouk was appointed to the UGET's executive bureau[1] while at the same time, he was conspiratively active for the outlawed leftist movement El Amal Ettounsi.[3]

Career

From 1989 on, he worked as a coordinator for the newly founded Arab Institute for Human Rights.[4] Since 2008 he has been secretary-general of the non-governmental Arab Democracy Foundation and member of the International Steering Committee of the Community of Democracies.[5]

Marzouk is one of the founders of Nidaa Tounes and member of the party's Executive Committee.[4] As Beji Caid Essebsi's campaign manager in the Tunisian presidential election, 2014[6] he announced Essebsi's victory in the runoff vote on 21 December,[7] stating that the Tunisians were now turning the page of the transitorial phase[8] and that Tunisia was now a stable democracy.[9] Marzouk’s faction within Nidaa Tounes supports a more assertive, secularist government.[10]

Publications and working papers

References

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