in

Tunisian lawyers launch one-day strike over police repression

Hundreds of people have taken to the streets of the Tunisian capital after a lawyer was allegedly tortured by police.

Lawyers march in the streets of Tunis

Tunisian lawyers take part in a protest against the recent arrests of their colleagues, in Tunis, Tunisia, on Thursday, May 16, 2024 [Anis Mili/AP Photo]

Published On 16 May 2024

16 May 2024

Lawyers in the north African nation of Tunisia have launched a one-day strike following the recent arrest of two of their colleagues, as opposition to repressive measures by President Kais Saied intensifies.

Hundreds of people took to the streets of the capital city of Tunis on Thursday, voicing anger over the arrest of the two lawyers, one of whom was allegedly tortured during detention. Two journalists were also recently arrested.

KEEP READING

list of 3 items

list 1 of 3

Despair in Ettadhamen: The harsh reality of Tunisia’s economy

list 2 of 3

Tunisia’s Ghannouchi sentenced to a year in prison: Lawyer

list 3 of 3

Tunisia’s choice: Migration and realpolitik in the Mediterranean

end of list

“No fear, no terror. Power belongs to the people,” protesters chanted near the Palace of Justice.

The government has denied any wrongdoing or abuses, but has faced persistent criticism for moves to consolidate power and crack down on dissent. Demonstrations also took place last week, calling on President Saied – whom critics have claimed has become increasingly authoritarian since taking power in 2019 – to set a date for elections after controversially shuttering parliament and expanding executive powers.

Play Video

Video Duration 00 minutes 52 seconds

00:52

Tunisian police raided the bar association’s headquarters on Monday to arrest Mahdi Zagrouba, a lawyer who has been critical of the president. Another lawyer, Sonia Dahmani, had been detained over the weekend.

The association said that Zagrouba was tortured and that his body showed signs of abuse, including bruises. Both Zagrouba and Dahmani were charged under a controversial cybercrime law targeting “fake news”.

“We categorically deny that the lawyer was subjected to torture or ill-treatment. It is a scenario to escape responsibility after it was proven that he assaulted a policeman during a protest this week,” Tunisian Ministry of Interior official Fakher Bouzghaia said.

Sign up for Al Jazeera

Weekly Newsletter

The latest news from around the world. Timely. Accurate. Fair.

E-mail address

Subscribe

By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy

protected by reCAPTCHA

“We demand an apology from the authorities for the enormous blunders committed,” bar association President Hatem Mziou said, referring to the arrests.

“We are fighting for a democratic climate and respect for freedoms,” he added

What do you think?

Newbie

Written by Eric

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

    EU investigates Meta over Facebook and Instagram child safety

    Electricity: Most DisCos are technically insolvent— NERC