Many
Arabs in the Middle East and North Africa regard Bouazizi as a hero and inspiration. He is credited with galvanising the frustrations of the region's youth against their governments into the mass demonstrations, revolts, and revolutions that have become known as the
Arab Spring. One year on, Tunisian writer and academic
Larbi Sadiki asserted that Bouazizi's self-immolation "changed the course of Arab political history", achieving the "breakthrough in the fight against autocracy". However, he also wrote it would take years before the act and the subsequent chain of events that followed were "profoundly grasped by historians and social scientists". Bouazizi is considered a martyr by the
Progressive Democratic Party (PDP) of Tunisia. the
Mohamed-Bouazizi Square was unveiled four days later. On 17 February, the main square in
Tunis that was previously called "November 7", after the date of Ben Ali's take-over in 1987, was renamed "January 14", though some had suggested it should honor Bouazizi (though a major roadway leading to the city's airport was renamed for him). Bouazizi was posthumously awarded the 2011
Sakharov Prize as one of "five representatives of the Arab people, in recognition and support of their drive for freedom and human rights". On 17 December, a cart statue was unveiled in Sidi Bouzid in honor of Bouazizi. Tunisia's first elected president
Moncef Marzouki attended the ceremony, stating "Thank you to this land, which has been marginalised for centuries, for bringing dignity to the entire Tunisian people." Also, in Sidi Bouzid, as well as in the capital city of Tunis, both cities' respective main streets were renamed, "Boulevard Mohamed Bouazizi". The
United Kingdom's
The Times newspaper named Bouazizi person of the year for 2011. "By Fire", a story by Moroccan author
Tahar Ben Jelloun inspired by this incident, was published in
The New Yorker edition of 16 September 2013. It is a fictional treatment; some details in the story differ from the factual account. An interview with the author about his story was posted to
The New Yorker "This Week in Fiction" on 9 September 2013. In 2011
Hamid Sadr, an Iranian author based in Austria, published the book "" ("The curse of the greengrocer Mohamed Bouazizi"), in which he speculated whether the ensuing protest movement would lead towards democracy or theocracy. On 17 December 2015, the
Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet, the Nobel Peace Prize laureates of that year, as well as other civil society organizations, celebrated Mohamed Bouazizi and the start of the Arab spring five years after his death in a ceremony in Sidi Bouzid. A
Guardian article in 2020 noted that many Tunisians had become disillusioned at the bleak economic situation in the country, and "cursed" Bouazizi's name and legacy.
Related incidents Bouazizi's actions triggered a number of self-immolations, in protests emulating his own, in several other countries in the
Greater Middle East and Europe. In
Algeria in particular, protests against rising
food prices and spreading unemployment have resulted in
many self-immolations. The first reported case following Bouazizi's death was that of Mohsen Bouterfif, a 37-year-old father of two, who set himself on fire when the mayor of
Boukhadra,
Tébessa Province refused to meet with him and others regarding employment and housing requests on 13 January 2011. According to a report in
El-Watan, the mayor challenged him, saying if he had courage he would immolate himself by fire as Bouazizi had done. He died on 24 January. In nearby
El Oued Province, Maamir Lotfi, a 36-year-old unemployed father of six, also denied a meeting with the governor, burned himself in front of the town hall of
El Oued on 17 January, dying on 12 February. Abdelhafid Boudechicha, a 29-year-old day laborer who lived with his parents and five siblings, burned himself in
Medjana on 28 January over employment and housing issues. He died the following day. In the six months immediately after Mohamed Bouazizi's death on 4 January 2011, at least 107 Tunisians set themselves on fire. The men who immolated themselves were mostly young unmarried men from poor, rural areas, and had only basic education. His act of protest helped instigate weeks of protest and, later, the resignation of Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak on 11 February 2011. In
Saudi Arabia, an unidentified 65-year-old man died on 21 January 2011 after setting himself on fire in the town of
Samtah,
Jizan. This was apparently the kingdom's first known case of self-immolation. Although these cases, with the
exception of Egypt, did not garner the same kind of popular reaction that Bouazizi's case did in Tunisia, the Algerian,
Yemeni, and
Jordanian governments experienced significant protests and made major concessions in response to them. He died five days later. In
Amsterdam, the Netherlands, Kambiz Roustay, a 36-year-old
asylum seeker from Iran, set himself on fire on
Dam Square in protest of being refused asylum. Roustay had fled the country for publishing works undermining the regime, and feared being tortured by the
Iranian government upon his return. ==See also==