“It’s more of a turn-the-page approach to human rights and transitional justice,” said Christopher Lamont, an expert on transitional justice in North Africa at the Netherlands’ University of Groningen. “They frame the justice and accountability debate as going back in the past. Reopening old wounds would be harmful when Tunisia’s priority should be economic development.”

After years of gathering material and getting organized, Tunisia’s Truth and Dignity Commission began hearings in November and for weeks electrified the country with the testimony of those tortured and abused by the old regime — many of them Islamists. With the new law, the fear is that business executives and others brought before the commission will now have no incentive to cooperate as they simply wait for new amnesty laws.

For democracy advocates, it’s easy to feel a sense of despair about Tunisia’s difficult six-year journey since the revolution, as the economy has stumbled, and many of the bread-and-butter issues that first brought people to the streets have yet to be resolved. Frustrated with a lack of progress and battered by repeated terrorist attacks, people seem ready to turn back to the old politicians who are claiming to be the only ones with the experience and competence to lead the country out of this mess. But would it come at the price of a return to the old ways?

The new law did not pass unopposed in Tunisia, and there have been protests against it across the country, including one on Saturday in the capital that drew thousands of primarily younger people.

Since the revolution, Tunisia’s once strangled civil society has blossomed with new unions, advocacy groups and many organizations dedicated to watching the politicians and hounding out corruption.

“When you see the big demonstrations in the streets over certain laws, people demanding freedom, you cannot say that people are not interested in political life in general or the future of transitional justice in Tunisia,” said Youssef Belgacem, senior program manager for IWatch, which monitors elections and publishes reports on corruption.

While he’s not happy to see some of these old figures back, he said they are welcome to participate in politics, just not under the same old rules. “It will never go back to the old way. We have our old figures, but we have a new system,” he said. “We have people who can resist the mistakes made by the government who can hold the government accountable.”