Tunisian activists decry intimidation as vote looms
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[January 27, 2023]
By Tarek Amara and Angus McDowall
TUNIS (Reuters) - Tunisian activist Chaimaa Issa is due to face a
military court on Friday on charges of insulting a president whom she
accuses of trashing the democracy built from a 2011 revolution in which
she took full part.
Opposition figures say her trial is part of an effort by the authorities
to curb dissent against President Kais Saied amid a parliamentary
election in which low enthusiasm has undermined his claim of public
support for his seizure of powers.
The first round of the election in December drew turnout of only 11%,
prompting widespread ridicule among Saied's opponents and new demands by
the powerful labour union that he change tack.
The second round will come on Sunday, two days after Issa's trial is due
to begin and after a string of prosecutions of other critics of the
president.
"The situation is very dangerous and disturbing because of the attacks
on democracy," she said.
Saied, who was elected in a landslide in 2019, sent tanks to shut down
parliament in 2021 before seizing most powers and rewriting the
constitution, passing a new version last year in a referendum.
He said his actions were both legal and necessary to save Tunisia from
years of economic stagnation and political bickering, and has labelled
his foes traitors, calling for action against them.
The authorities have rejected claims that any of the trials, including
that of Issa, are politically motivated.
However, while Saied has promised to defend rights and freedoms won in
the election, the new parliament that voters are selecting will have
hardly any power and he will retain ultimate authority.
PROTESTS
Issa is one of several prominent critics of Saied facing court cases,
timing that the opposition believes is a deliberate tactic of
intimidation.
"Saied started a campaign against the leaders of the front row of the
opposition," said Najib Chebbi, head of the "Salvation Front" coalition
of opposition groups that have held repeated protests against the
president.
Ali Laaryedh, a leader of the biggest opposition party, Ennahda, was
imprisoned last month on charges of having helped send jihadists to
Syria while part of the ruling coalition, something he and it deny.
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Tunisian activist Chaimaa Issa gestures
during a protest against Tunisian President Kais Saied, in Tunis,
Tunisia January 14, 2023. REUTERS/Zoubeir Souissi
Ghazi Chouachi, the former leader of Attayar party and a vocal
opponent of Saied, is being prosecuted for a radio interview in
which he criticised the president.
Another prominent activist, Ayachi Hammami, faces trial under a law
prohibiting the spread of "fake news" online after having criticized
Saied and the justice minister.
For Issa, the contrast between today's Tunisia and the democracy she
sought to build after the 2011 revolution is stark.
Two days before the previous autocracy collapsed in January 2011,
she had written a social media post saying she was prepared to pay
any price for freedom. As the daughter of a political prisoner, it
was a cost she understood.
"Today, I repeat the same message. I am ready to pay the price for
freedom and democracy," she said.
For many Tunisians, however, political and democratic goals have
taken a back seat to an economic crash that has pushed the state to
the brink of bankruptcy while emptying supermarket shelves of key
goods.
The UGTT labour union, which says it has a million members, has
focused its attacks on Saied's handling of the economy and his
government's promises of painful reforms as the price of securing an
international bailout.
It now demands Saied also abort his political plans and instead move
to a national dialogue that includes all the main civil society
groupings to forge a new path forwards.
The dialogue represents "a last opportunity" for Saied, though he
has so far rejected the idea, said Sami Tahri, a senior UGTT
official.
"If the president does not accept dialogue, we will have our say and
not remain silent," he said.
(Reporting by Tarek Amara and Jihed Abidellaoui, writing by Angus
McDowall, editing by Nick Macfie)
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