Thousands of Tunisians rally against president on revolution anniversary
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[January 14, 2023]
By Tarek Amara
TUNIS (Reuters) - Thousands of protesters marched against Tunisian
President Kais Saied's seizure of near total power in central Tunis on
Saturday, demanding he step down as they marked the anniversary of a key
date in the 2011 revolution that brought democracy.
The central Habib Bourguiba Avenue, the traditional site for major
demonstrations, was crowded with thousands of protesters waving Tunisian
flags, according to a Reuters journalist there, amid chants of "the
people demand the fall of the regime".
A heavy police presence remained outside the Interior Ministry building
on the street, along with water cannon.
"Tunisia is going through the most dangerous time in its history. Saied
took control of all authority and struck at democracy. The economy is
collapsing. We will not be silent," said Said Anouar Ali, a 34-year-old
demonstrator.
Protesters had pushed past police and metal barricades to reach the
avenue, defying initial efforts by the authorities to keep separate
several parallel protests that had been called by different political
parties and civil society organisations.
"We were on Bourguiba in January 2011 when Saied was not present...
today he is closing Bourguiba to us. We will reach it whatever the
price," said Chaima Issa, an activist who took part in the 2011
revolution before the crowd pushed through the barriers.
Another major opposition political party, aligned with the
pre-revolution autocracy, held a separate rally in downtown Tunis after
it was banned from marching near the presidential palace in Carthage.
Saied shut down the elected parliament in 2021 and began to reshape the
political system, but low turnout for December's election of a new,
mostly powerless, legislature revealed little public appetite for his
changes.
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Demonstrators clash with police during a
protest against Tunisian President Kais Saied, on the anniversary of
the 2011 uprising, in Tunis, Tunisia January 14, 2023. REUTERS/Zoubeir
Souissi
Meanwhile the economy is failing, with staple goods disappearing
from shelves, and the government has not yet been able to secure an
international bailout with state finances facing bankruptcy.
The main political forces, including most parties and the labour
union, now oppose Saied's project, with many of them calling it an
anti-democratic coup.
However, they have failed to repair deep ideological and personal
fissures that divided them for years rather than forming a united
front.
Many parties still reject a role for the biggest party, the Islamist
Ennahda. The powerful UGTT labour union seeks a national dialogue
but will not invite any party that accuses Saied of a coup.
The protests come 12 years to the day after the ousting of former
autocrat, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, and Jan. 14 is seen by most
Tunisian parties and civil society groups as the anniversary of the
revolution.
However, Saied unilaterally changed the official anniversary date
and has said he regards Jan. 14 as a moment when the revolution went
astray.
While there has been no major crackdown on opponents of Saied, and
police have allowed most protests against him, their handling of
demonstrations on Jan. 14 last year was more forceful, prompting
condemnation from rights activists.
(Reporting by Tarek Amara, additional reporting by Latifa Guesmi,
writing by Angus McDowall, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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