Daily Nation Newspaper

Tunisia’s president says necessary to amend constituti­on

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TUNIS - Tunisian President Kais Saied has announced plans to amend the constituti­on and form a new government months after he dismissed the prime minister and suspended parliament in moves his critics called a coup.

Speaking to two TV stations after an evening stroll through the heart of the capital on Saturday, Saied said he would form a new government “as soon as possible” after selecting “the people with the most integrity.” But he declined to give a specific timeline.

Saied also said it was necessary to change the constituti­on. “The Tunisian people rejected the constituti­on. We can introduce amendments to the text, - while adding that the charter is “not eternal.”

Elected in late 2019, the legal theorist and former law professor has billed himself as the ultimate interprete­r of the constituti­on. He invoked that power on July 25 to fire the prime minister, freeze parliament and assume all executive powers. The power grab came amid chronic legislativ­e infighting that had crippled governance and was followed by a sweeping anti-corruption drive that has included detentions, travel bans and house arrests of politician­s, businessme­n and judicial officials.

Saied has yet to appoint a new government or reveal a roadmap towards normality, despite repeated demands by political parties.

His moves have been criticised by judges and opponents, in particular the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party, the largest bloc in parliament.

But some Tunisians, exasperate­d by their political class and its perceived corruption, impunity and failure to improve living standards more than a decade since the country’s protests launched the Arab Spring, see them as a necessary evil.

Hailed as a rare democratic success story in the Middle East and North Africa, Tunisia was struggling with dire economic woes and the Covid-19 pandemic before being plunged into the latest political crisis.

Earlier this month, diplomats from G7 nations - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the US - called on Saied to return Tunisia to “a constituti­onal order” and urged him to convey a clear way forward. – AFP.

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