TUNIS, Tunisia
A Tunisian court sentenced former President Moncef Marzouki to eight years in prison in absentia on Friday on charges of assaulting the state security and inciting Tunisians against each other, a judicial official said.
This is the second prison
sentence against Marzouki, who resides in Paris, after a judge sentenced him in
2021 to four years in absentia.
Mohamed Zitouna, the
spokesperson of the Tunis court, said the verdict was based on statements by
Marzouki that included incitement in a speech he gave in Paris, without giving
further details.
Marzouki, who was president
from 2011 to 2014, is a fierce critic of President Kais Saied.
Saied closed Parliament,
sacked the government and began ruling by decree in 2021, a step that Marzouki
and main opposition leaders described as a coup.
The Tunisian president, who
enshrined his new constitutional powers in a referendum with a low turnout in
2022, has denied his actions were a coup and said they were needed to save
Tunisia from years of chaos.
Most opposition chiefs were
arrested since last year, including Rached Ghannouchi, the head of the Islamist
Ennahda party, and Abir Moussi, the leader of Free Constitutional.
Authorities also detained
prominent opposition figures Jawher Ben Mbarek, Khayam Turki, Ghazi Chaouachi,
Issam Chabbi, Abdelhamid Jalasi and Ridha Belhaj last year in a crackdown on
suspicion of plotting against state security.
The opposition accuses Saied
of muzzling the press and imposing authoritarian rule, and says his
constitutional changes have pulled apart the democracy built after a 2011
revolution.
Saied rejects those
accusations and has called his critics criminals, traitors and terrorists and
warned that any judge who freed them would be considered abetting them.
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