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Tunisia: President Saied denies the country is returning to authoritarianism

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Tunisian President, Kais Saied, has assured that the country’s freedom is “guaranteed” after rights groups warned of a threat signaled by the violent suppression of an anti-Saied protest.

Authoritarianism is now the only concern of Civil society groups and Saied’s political opponents as they have expressed fears of returning to
it because it’s the only democracy to have emerged from the Arab Spring protests over a decade ago.

Speaking in a meeting with Interior Minister, Taoufik Charfeddine, the President said he “affirms that freedoms are guaranteed in Tunisia, recalling his commitment to equality before the law and his rejection of violence” the presidency official Twitter account made it known.

Police, on Friday, cracked down heavily on hundreds gathered in a rally against a July 2021 power grab by Saied, which some have dubbed a “coup”.

Officers, backed by water cannons, charged at demonstrators, fired tear gas, and made dozens of violent arrests.

An inquiry has been opened into the death of a 57-year-old man who was found unconscious during the protest. His death was described by the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party as a “murder”.

The capital, Tunis, had not witnessed such scenes for a decade. About 20 journalists were manhandled during the protest, which fell on the 11th anniversary of the late dictator, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s flight into exile.

“It is clear that freedoms are threatened and face an imminent peril,” Yassine Jelassi, head of the Tunisian National Journalists’ Union (SNJT), told a press conference organized by 21 human rights groups on Tuesday.

The following day, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) voiced concerns that the “gains of the revolution” could be diluted and expressed fears of an
“authoritarian turn” in the North African country.

On July 25, Saied suspended parliament, dismissed the Prime Minister, and said he would assume executive powers. Then in September, he took steps to effectively rule by decree.

Some Tunisians, tired of the inept and graft-ridden parliamentary system, welcomed his moves.

He has laid out a roadmap for drafting a new constitution before elections at the end of this year.