New Era

Tunisia awaits election for powerless parliament

- -Nampa/AFP

TUNIS - Tunisians got to the polls Saturday to elect a parliament largely stripped of its powers, under a hyperpresi­dential system installed by the head of state Kais Saied after his power grab last year. Over a decade since Tunisia's popular revolution unseated dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, opposition parties have urged a boycott of the vote, which they say is part of a "coup" against the only democracy to have emerged from the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings. The election for the new 161-seat assembly comes after President Saied froze the previous legislatur­e on 25 July last year, following months of political crisis exacerbate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic. He later dissolved the parliament, which had long been dominated by his nemesis the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party.

Saied on Wednesday defended his decision, saying that the "Tunisian people, wherever I went, were all asking to dissolve the parliament".

"The country was on the brink of civil war," he told US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Washington. The previous legislatur­e had far-reaching powers, in the mixed presidenti­alparliame­ntary system enshrined in the North African country's postrevolu­tion constituti­on.

Last July, Saied used a widely shunned referendum to push through a new constituti­on, stripping parliament of any real clout and giving his own office almost unlimited powers. The legal expert who oversaw its drafting said the version Saied published had been changed in a way that could lead to a "dictatoria­l regime". Saied later published a slightly amended draft.

Analyst Hamadi Redissi said the aim of Saturday's polls was "to complete the process that started on 25 July" last year.

The resulting parliament "won't have many powers - it won't be able to appoint a government or censure it, except under draconian conditions that are almost impossible to meet".

Saied's new system essentiall­y does away with political parties and electoral lists, meaning candidates will be elected as individual­s with no declared affiliatio­n. The assembly's final make-up is not expected to be determined until March next year, after any second-round run-offs have been completed. The vote aims "to increase the legitimacy of the presidency", Redissi said, adding that the result would be "a rump parliament without any powers". Almost all the country's political parties, including Ennahdha, have said they will boycott the vote, labelling Saied's moves a "coup". The powerful UGTT trade union federation, which did not openly oppose the initial power grab, has called the poll meaningles­s.

Most of the 1 058 candidates are unknowns. The Tunisian Observator­y for Democratic Transition says some 26% are teachers, and a further 22 are mid-level public servants. The election result will likely see a rop in the representa­tion of women, with just 122 female candidates. Few of the country's nine million registered voters are expected to turn out. Several young people told AFP they had little interest in the election or desire to know more about the candidates. Marwa Ben Miled, a 53-year-old shopkeeper, told AFP the country was "going from bad to worse". "What happens on the political scene doesn't interest me anymore," she said. "I don't trust anyone." Saied's electoral law forbids candidates from speaking to the foreign press, a stance the North Africa Foreign Correspond­ents' Club said would make it difficult for journalist­s to do their jobs.

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