19 January 2011
Last updated at 16:44 ET
Tunisia's interim leader has promised a "total break" with the past, following the ousting of President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in mass protests.
In a speech on state TV, Fouad Mebazaa also said his transition government would ensure an independent justice system and media freedoms.
Earlier, prosecutors opened an investigation into foreign assets of Mr Ben Ali and his family.
More than 100 people have reportedly died in the unrest, the UN said.
On Wednesday, hundreds of protesters took to the streets again in the Tunisian capital Tunis, urging allies of the ousted president to stop clinging to power.
Waving banners and chanting, they called for all links to the old regime to be severed.
However, riot police did not respond with tear gas or water cannons, the BBC's Wyre Davies in Tunis reports.
While the situation remains tense, curfew hours have been reduced, traffic on the streets is increasing, political cartoons have appeared in the newly free press and some shops and businesses are reopening, our correspondent says.
Amnesty "I guarantee that this transition government will ensure a total break with the past," Mr Mebazaa said on Wednesday.
"Together we can write a new page in the history of our country."
In his first address to the nation since Mr Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Saturday, Mr Mebazaa also thanked the army for helping to maintain security, saying that the situation was returning to normal.
"We have discovered those responsible for the terror in our country. We have arrested these armed gangs."
He added that the priority for the new government would be to issue amnesty for all political prisoners.
There are reports that the amnesty has already begun, our correspondent says.
He adds that Tunisia's state news agency TAP said the first of more than 1,800 prisoners who had been sentenced to less than six month were already being released.
Private jet As the political turmoil continues, Tunisia's national unity cabinet is reported to have postponed its first meeting.
Continue reading the main story TUNISIAN CABINET
Ministers in the new interim government are currently discussing how to resolve deep divisions over the inclusion in key posts of members of the former government.
Mr Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Friday following a spate of violent protests across Tunisia over unemployment, poverty and corruption.
Four opponents of Mr Ben Ali resigned from the new unity government within a day of being appointed, in protest at the number of ministers from the old regime who were still included.
In Geneva, Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey announced a decision to freeze any funds of Mr Ben Ali held there.
Ms Calmy-Rey said Bern acted to prevent assets being withdrawn and also to ensure that a new Tunisian administration would be able to retrieve assets taken illicitly.
The ban also applies to any assets held by "his entourage", the foreign ministry said in a statement.
A Swiss judicial source told Reuters news agency that an association of Tunisians living in Switzerland had sought the freezing of assets including a building on Geneva's exclusive Rue du Rhone and a Falcon 9000 jet said to be at Geneva airport.
In other developments on Wednesday, the head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, linked the upheaval in Tunisia to deteriorating economic conditions throughout the Arab world.
"The Arab soul is broken by poverty, unemployment and general recession," he said at the opening of an Arab League summit in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Are you in Tunisia? What are your views on the new unity government? Are you protesting? You can send us your experiences using the form below:
Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.
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In a speech on state TV, Fouad Mebazaa also said his transition government would ensure an independent justice system and media freedoms.
Earlier, prosecutors opened an investigation into foreign assets of Mr Ben Ali and his family.
More than 100 people have reportedly died in the unrest, the UN said.
On Wednesday, hundreds of protesters took to the streets again in the Tunisian capital Tunis, urging allies of the ousted president to stop clinging to power.
Waving banners and chanting, they called for all links to the old regime to be severed.
However, riot police did not respond with tear gas or water cannons, the BBC's Wyre Davies in Tunis reports.
While the situation remains tense, curfew hours have been reduced, traffic on the streets is increasing, political cartoons have appeared in the newly free press and some shops and businesses are reopening, our correspondent says.
Amnesty "I guarantee that this transition government will ensure a total break with the past," Mr Mebazaa said on Wednesday.
"Together we can write a new page in the history of our country."
In his first address to the nation since Mr Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Saturday, Mr Mebazaa also thanked the army for helping to maintain security, saying that the situation was returning to normal.
"We have discovered those responsible for the terror in our country. We have arrested these armed gangs."
He added that the priority for the new government would be to issue amnesty for all political prisoners.
There are reports that the amnesty has already begun, our correspondent says.
He adds that Tunisia's state news agency TAP said the first of more than 1,800 prisoners who had been sentenced to less than six month were already being released.
Private jet As the political turmoil continues, Tunisia's national unity cabinet is reported to have postponed its first meeting.
Continue reading the main story TUNISIAN CABINET
- Mohammed Ghannouchi stays on as prime minister; a Ben Ali ally, he has been in the job since 1999, keeping his post throughout the unrest
- Interior Minister Ahmed Friaa, appointed by Mr Ben Ali to mollify demonstrators, retains post
- Foreign Minister Kamal Morjane retains post
- Najib Chebbi, founder of opposition Progressive Democratic Party, named as development minister
- Ahmed Ibrahim, leader of opposition Ettajdid party, named minister of higher education
- Mustafa ben Jaafar, leader of opposition Union of Freedom and Labour, named health minister but refused to take office
- Slim Amamou, prominent blogger who was arrested during protests, becomes secretary of state for youth and sport
Ministers in the new interim government are currently discussing how to resolve deep divisions over the inclusion in key posts of members of the former government.
Mr Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Friday following a spate of violent protests across Tunisia over unemployment, poverty and corruption.
Four opponents of Mr Ben Ali resigned from the new unity government within a day of being appointed, in protest at the number of ministers from the old regime who were still included.
In Geneva, Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey announced a decision to freeze any funds of Mr Ben Ali held there.
Ms Calmy-Rey said Bern acted to prevent assets being withdrawn and also to ensure that a new Tunisian administration would be able to retrieve assets taken illicitly.
The ban also applies to any assets held by "his entourage", the foreign ministry said in a statement.
A Swiss judicial source told Reuters news agency that an association of Tunisians living in Switzerland had sought the freezing of assets including a building on Geneva's exclusive Rue du Rhone and a Falcon 9000 jet said to be at Geneva airport.
In other developments on Wednesday, the head of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, linked the upheaval in Tunisia to deteriorating economic conditions throughout the Arab world.
"The Arab soul is broken by poverty, unemployment and general recession," he said at the opening of an Arab League summit in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.
Are you in Tunisia? What are your views on the new unity government? Are you protesting? You can send us your experiences using the form below:
Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.
Read the terms and conditions
Webmaster Forum | SEO Forum | Coding Forum | Graphics Forum</b>

