Bangkok Post

Thousands rally to back Saied’s ‘coup’

Supporters say power grab was ‘necessary’

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More than 5,000 demonstrat­ors showed support on Sunday throughout Tunisia for President Kais Saied whose power grab has stirred controvers­y in the birthplace of the Arab Spring.

With an estimated 3,000 of them rallying in the capital Tunis, the pro-Saied crowd exceeded that which gathered a week earlier to oppose him.

“We are all Kais Saied, we are all Tunisia,” they chanted on Bourguiba Avenue, the main thoroughfa­re in central Tunis, also shouting that

“the people want the dissolutio­n of parliament”.

On July 25, after months of political stalemate, Mr Saied sacked the prime minister, suspended parliament and granted himself judicial powers, a move he followed up in September with measures that effectivel­y allow the president to rule by decree.

The parliament­ary suspension lifted immunity of MPs and on Sunday — in the latest detention of a legislator — a deputy and a journalist were arrested for criticisin­g Mr Saied’s moves, their lawyer Samir Ben Omar said.

Mr Saied, elected in late 2019, has said his action seeks to save Tunisia from “imminent peril” during a painful socio-economic crisis aggravated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The public health crisis has contribute­d to driving the official jobless rate from 15% to almost 18%. The economy has grown by only 0.6% over the past decade.

Security forces were deployed in force on Sunday on Bourguiba Avenue, especially in front of the municipal theatre where the demonstrat­ion was held.

The demonstrat­ors flew red and white Tunisian flags and carried banners reading: “The people want a revision of the constituti­on” and “Saied, official spokesman of the people”.

About 1,000 Saied supporters also rallied in the industrial city of Sfax, and a similar number in seaside Sousse, while smaller demonstrat­ions occurred elsewhere, local media reported.

“Saied wants to implement reforms and we back him,” Noura ben Fadhel, a civil servant, said at the Tunis rally. “I came to support change to end the current decline. We’re fed up with it. It’s been going on for 10 years and that’s enough!”

For Elyes Ouni, 28, who campaigned for Mr Saied in 2019, “July 25 ended a faulty system. Now it’s in the morgue and today we’re going to bury it.”

He blamed parliament for the “deteriorat­ion of the country”.

Mr Saied, a former law professor, considers Tunisia’s 2014 constituti­on to be unbalanced in favour of parliament. He has never hidden his hostility to political parties, especially the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha which had the largest number of seats in the suspended parliament.

The previous Sunday a crowd of an estimated 2,000 people rallied, also on Bourguiba Avenue, to protest what they branded Mr Saied’s “coup d’etat”.

Some shouted “Get out, get out”, the slogan that started in December 2010 and culminated in the resignatio­n of Tunisia’s dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011.

That triggered Arab Spring protests in several countries, but Tunisia is the only democracy to emerge from the movement.

Mr Ben Omar, the lawyer, said that MP Abdellatif al-Alaoui and Zitouna TV presenter Amer Ayad had been arrested on charges of “plotting against state security”.

In the programme, they both criticised the president’s Sept 29 appointmen­t of Najla Bouden as Tunisia’s first woman prime minister, with Ayad scoffing that she would function only as “servant of the sultan”.

Although Mr Saied’s July measures enjoyed significan­t public support, civil society groups have warned of a drift away from democracy.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Supporters of President Kais Saied rally in support of his seizure of power in Tunis on Sunday.
REUTERS Supporters of President Kais Saied rally in support of his seizure of power in Tunis on Sunday.
 ?? ?? Saied: Ruling the country by decree
Saied: Ruling the country by decree

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