On July 25, Saied sacked the government and suspended parliament for one month citing powers he says were granted by the constitution, but he has yet to reveal a “roadmap” for his decisions despite repeated demands by political parties.
Saied’s shock move has sparked uncertainties for Tunisia, where the Arab Spring began a decade ago, setting in motion pro-democracy revolts across the region that unseated autocratic leaders.
Tunisia, hailed as a rare democratic success story in the Middle East and North Africa, is mired in a political crisis compounded by dire economic woes and the Covid-19 pandemic.
Several politicians, businessmen and judges, as well as members of parliament — who lost their immunity after Saied suspended the legislature — have said they were banned from travelling abroad or put under house arrest without prior warning.
Their claims have sparked a chorus of condemnation, with critics denouncing “arbitrary” and “unjustified” measures.
But Saied offered a stiff response to his critics during a recent visit to the Tunis-Carthage International Airport.
“The freedom to travel is a constitutional right which I promise to guarantee,” he said. “But some people will have to answer to the judicial authorities before being able to travel”.
Saied insists that his actions are guaranteed by Article 80 of the constitution, which stipulates that the head of state can take “exceptional measures” in case of an “imminent danger” to national security.
Constitutional law professor Salsabil Klibi believes the terms of the controversial article “are more dangerous for rights and freedoms than a state of emergency”.
“It implies the suspension of rights and freedoms and other guarantees linked to them,” she said. Sana Ben Achour, a professor specialising in public law, was among many Saied critics who had accused the president of staging a “coup”.
The president’s measures “violate the constitution”, she said. “He holds power and, as far as he is concerned, he is the only one capable of interpreting the constitution,” she said. By doing so, he is effectively holding all power in his hands, Ben Achour told local media outlets.
But Saied, a former university professor and legal expert who had vowed to revamp the political system through his views of the law after his landslide election in 2019, has brushed aside such criticism. “We will continue to uphold our principles within the framework of the law, and the laws allow us to take measures to protect the state,” he said on Friday.
A group of 45 judges have penned a joint statement denouncing Saied’s travel bans as “authoritarian drift”. They also condemned what they called “the awful and unprecedented” moves by the president’s travel ban that bars judges from going abroad.
Saied’s nemesis, the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party — the largest bloc in parliament — said one of their leaders, Anouar Maarouf, was among those held under house arrest.
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