Nine months after a popular uprising that ended decades of authoritarian rule, Tunisians are set to vote for new leaders who will write the rules of the country's new political system.
Tunisia was the country that trigged what became known as the 'Arab Spring' after a month-long uprising forced then-President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to flee to Saudi Arabia.
The protests quickly spread to neighboring Egypt and Libya, along with countries in the Middle East such as Syria, Yemen and Bahrain.
Tunisia has been relatively calm in the weeks leading up to the election, with the exception of isolated protests against Nessma TV. With no other genuine democracies in the Arab world, many across the region are paying close attention to Tunisia's democratic transition.
Sunday's election for the constituent assembly is a litmus test for the depth of change the country has seen since January; and nerves were high on the eve of the vote.
Tunisian authorities arrested at least two well-known activists on Saturday evening, both of whom have been prominent critics of the interim government led by Beji Caid Essebsi.
Fruits of the revolution
In a separate incident, police clamped down on a sit-in outside the Kasbah, near government offices, by young men who had been shot by security forces during the uprising, demanding that the government help them with basic healthcare.
Some Tunisians who braved bullets while fighting to end Ben Ali's presidency, now feel that politicians have moved in to claim the fruits of the rebellion with little regard for the very people who paved the way for political change.
The group of around 20 staged a sit-in outside the Kasbah, near the office of Beji Caid Essebsi, the interim prime minister, beginning late morning on Saturday. At around 5:30pm, police forced them to leave.
They arrested Tahrir Hammami, a human rights activist and unionist who was there to support them.
In addition to the sit-in, seven young men have been on a hunger strike since Wednesday, protesting against what they say is the interim government's failure to take care of their basic health needs.
Another 10 injured men traveled to Tunis from Kasserine and Thala to join them, but the government is continuing to refuse the injured men free hospitalization.
All of them had been shot by security forces as they protested peacefully in the days immediately before Ben Ali was ousted.
On Friday, as political parties wrapped up their campaigns for Sunday's vote, the men still nursing their wounds stepped up their protest, cutting off their consumption of water. They are staying in the newly-opened premise of Nawaat, the bloggers’ collective.
Leila el-Arbi, whose son Rachid el-Arbi is one of those taking part in the hunger strike, said politicians have ignored the plight of the injured.
Rachid has been paralyzed from the waist down since he was shot on January 13 in his upper chest, and his body is covered in bedsores.
She will not be voting on Sunday. "Who would I vote for?" she said.
Hope for change
Tarek Dziri, from the town of Fahs, came to the capital to join the protest. Dziri, who has been confined to a wheelchair since receiving two bullets on January 12, agrees their needs have been overlooked by both the members of the interim government and the political parties running for election.
But unlike many of the other protesters, he will vote on Sunday, for an independent list not linked to any of the major parties.
"I hope Tunisia will change in the future," he said.
Hamdi Abdesslam, a political activist who, like Hammai and Dhaifallah, is calling for a boycott of Sunday's vote, said that the interim government was targeting its biggest critics ahead of the election.
"The arrest are targeted against young people and adults who believe that this supposedly democratic transition is only serving to allow the old regime to keep hold of its grip on power," Abdesslam said.
Abdesslam said he had no doubt that the members of the interim government, many of whom have links to the former regime, will tamper with Sunday's vote.
The activists are not alone in their fears.
Kamel Jendoubi, head of the ISIE, the independent electoral authority that is overseeing the election, warned the interim government on Saturday that it should not interfere in the vote.
Opposition figures including Rachid Ghannouchi, head of the moderate Islamist party al-Nahda, and Moncef Marzouki, head of the Congress Party for the Republic, have also expressed fears of a "counter-revolution" in recent days.
Hannaoui Ben Othmen, a spokesperson for Zouheir Makhlouf, an independent candidate for the region of Nabel and well-known human rights activist, said that while a minority of counter-revolutionaries were seeking to undermine the election, everything was on track for Sunday's ballot to be a success.
He believed that arrests had been made in a bid to ensure security so that the election would go smoothly, he said.
"I'm hopeful it will go well, because the military is there to ensure security and citizens are being prudent," he said.
PHOTO CAPTION
A man walks past election posters in Tunis
Al Jazeera