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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Tutu Alicante

Interviewed January 4, 2011

The Arab Spring clearly shows that as a people, as a community, as a group of persons, we have so much more power than we think we do. The Arab Spring – just like many other situations where a people has won their freedom, specifically in South Africa, for example, shows that there are more things that we have in common than that separate us.

Today in Equatorial Guinea, specifically, we still think that ethnicity divides us. We still think that there is too much fear. We still think that there is too much repression. And even though there are ethnic divisions, even though there is repression, even though there is fear, we are much closer today to a positive, non-violent change in Equatorial Guinea than we were ten years ago.

With the organization that I run, I hope, I am certain, I have faith that we can find these things that unite us, find a message that unites us, and use this message, in a non-violent way, to inform the world, to invite the international community to help us improve the lack of democracy, the lack of freedoms, the lack of political space inside our country and improve our condition.