Tunisia's powerful labour union re-elects leader
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[February 19, 2022]
TUNIS (Reuters) - Tunisia's powerful
UGTT labour union on Saturday re-elected Noureddine Taboubi as its
leader as it approaches a critical national turning point in which it
may play a pivotal role.
Taboubi, who has been UGTT leader for five years, has taken a cautious
stance during the turbulent months since President Kais Saied seized
executive powers in a move his foes call a coup.
The union's blessing is seen as vital for any effort by Tunisia's
authorities to implement economic reforms demanded by foreign donors in
return for a financial rescue package to avert a looming crisis that
threatens to bankrupt Tunisia.
Its stance will also be crucial for Saied's plans to remake Tunisian
politics after he suspended the elected parliament, brushed aside the
democratic constitution to say he could rule by decree and brought the
judiciary under his own control.
With more than a million members and the ability to shut down Tunisia's
economy with strikes, the UGTT is widely seen as the most powerful
political player in the country and a rare organisation that might
withstand presidential authority.
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Noureddine Taboubi, Secretary General of the Tunisian General Labour
Union (UGTT), speaks during an interview with Reuters in Tunis,
Tunisia January 23, 2021. Picture taken January 23, 2021.
REUTERS/Angus McDowall
Saied has so far largely ignored the
UGTT's repeated requests to take part in a broad-based political and
economic dialogue over the crisis and his plans to rewrite the
constitution and after meeting Taboubi in July, he did not see him
again until January.
Taboubi's re-election took place at the union's congress, a meeting
held every five years and the final statement emphasised its demand
for an inclusive process for major changes that Saied is pushing in
the political and justice systems.
The president has in effect suspended the constitution to say he can
rule by decree and has seized control of judicial appointments,
moves his critics say undermine rule of law.
UGTT's request recalls the role it played after the 2011 revolution
that brought democracy and triggered the Arab spring, when it won
the Nobel Peace Prize in 2015 after joining other civil society
groups to avert dangerous street polarisation.
(Reporting by Tarek Amara and Angus McDowall. Editing by Jane
Merriman)
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