TUNIS, Tunisia
A judge in Tunisia handed down lengthy sentences to prominent politicians and at least one leading journalist in a move criticized by a media union and leading opposition parties as the latest move targeting critics of President Kais Saied.
Among those sentenced
Wednesday include 83-year-old Rached Ghannouchi, the country’s most prominent
opposition leader, who has been behind bars for nearly two years.
Ghannouchi, the co-founder of
the Islamist movement Ennahda and Tunisia’s former Assembly Speaker, was
sentenced to an additional 22 years in prison for undermining state security.
He boycotted the proceedings against him.
Ennahda condemned the trial as
politically motivated and said the prosecutions were “aimed at revenge,
violating basic human rights and freedoms, undermining the rule of law and
blatantly politicizing the judiciary.”
The National Salvation Front,
a coalition of opposition parties that includes Ennahda, said in a statement
that the sentences issued against bloggers, politicians and former government
officials totaled more than 760 years and marked “one of the darkest periods”
for the country’s judicial branch, which has seen judges dismissed and power
wrested from it by Saied's executive branch.
“This particular chamber is
becoming a specialized tool for issuing harsh sentences against politicians,”
said one of its leaders, Ahmed Nejib Chebbi.
The charges stem from a 2019
case against a media company that provided services for Ennahda during that
year’s presidential elections. Those involved are accused of defamation,
spreading falsehoods, money laundering, undermining state security and illegally
accepting funds from abroad.
Human rights groups have
criticized such cases as a way to target Saied’s opponents. Saied won a second
term last October in a landslide election while his leading opponents,
including Ghannouchi, languished in prison.
“These rulings bring Tunisia
back to a period the people sought to leave behind through their revolution,”
an Ennahda statement on Thursday said, referring to the 2011 ouster of Zine El
Abidine Ben Ali, the first Arab dictator toppled as part of the Arab Spring
uprising that swept the region that year.
In the years that followed,
the North African nation was seen as a success story for its transition to
democracy, rewriting its constitution and winning a Nobel Peace Prize for
political compromise. But signs of authoritarianism have re-emerged since Saied
took power in 2019.
Throughout his tenure, Saied
has suspended parliament, rewritten the constitution to consolidate his power
and arrested politicians, activists and journalists who criticized him.
The court on Wednesday also
sentenced in absentia a group of Ennahda politicians who’ve fled the country
and now live in exile, including former Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, who was
sentenced to 35 years on state security charges similar to Ghannouchi’s.
Journalist Chadha Haj Mubarak
was sentenced to five years in prison as part of the same case, the National
Syndicate of Tunisian Journalists said. The union called for her immediate
release and in a statement denounced the court’s lack of respect for press
freedoms. In a statement Mubarak’s attorney, Souhail Medimegh, said his client
was being charged purely for her journalism.
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