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Singularity
07-26-2021, 09:41 PM
Excerpt:
https://news.yahoo.com/tunisian-protesters-march-against-government-160310910.html


Tunisia president sacks defence minister amid political turmoil

Tunisian President Kais Saied is greeted by supporters late Sunday after he ousted the prime minister and ordered parliament closed

Kais Saied
Rached Ghannouchi
Hichem Mechichi
Kaouther Larbi
Sun, July 25, 2021, 10:03 AM·4 min read

Tunisian President Kais Saied sacked the defence minister Monday, a day after ousting the prime minister and suspending parliament, plunging the young democracy into constitutional crisis in the midst of a pandemic.

Street clashes erupted Monday outside the army-barricaded parliament, after Saied dismissed Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi and ordered parliament closed for 30 days, a move the biggest political party Ennahdha decried as a "coup".

Saied declared on Sunday he had "taken the necessary decisions to save Tunisia, the state and the Tunisian people," following street protests in multiple cities against the government's handling of the Covid pandemic in the North African country.

The president, who under the constitution controls the armed forces, warned his opponents against taking up arms, threatening that if anyone "fires a single bullet, our forces will respond with a rain of bullets".

On Monday afternoon, the presidency announced the dismissals of Defence Minister Ibrahim Bartaji and Hasna Ben Slimane, the acting justice minister.

Soldiers from early Monday blockaded the assembly in Tunis while Saied backers hurled stones, bottles and insults at supporters of the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha, whose leader was barred entry to the complex.

Troops also surrounded the office of Mechichi.

Later in the afternoon, the protests died down, with the presidency extending an overnight curfew in place to combat the coronavirus and banning gatherings of more than three people.

- 'Very dangerous' -

Saied's dramatic move -- a decade on from Tunisia's 2011 revolution, often held up as the Arab Spring's sole success story -- comes even though the constitution enshrines a parliamentary democracy.

It "is a coup d'etat against the revolution and against the constitution," said Ennahdha, the lead party in Tunisia's fractious ruling coalition, warning its members "will defend the revolution".

The powerful Tunisian General Labour Union (UGTT) which played a key role in the 2011 uprising, said the president had acted "in accordance" with the constitution to "prevent imminent danger and to restore the normal functioning" of the state.

The United States on Monday voiced alarm and called on the birthplace of the Arab Spring to adhere to "democratic principles", while the European Union appealed to people to respect the "rule of law" and to "avoid any resort to violence".

France urged a speedy return to "normal functioning" of the government, Russia said it was monitoring the situation, while Turkey, where the government supports Ennahdha, called for "democratic legitimacy" to be restored.

The crisis follows months of deadlock between the president, the premier and Ennahdha chief Rached Ghannouchi, which has crippled the Covid response, as deaths have surged to one of the world's highest per capita rates.

More than 18,000 people have died of coronavirus in a nation of 12 million.

Police also shuttered the local bureau of Qatari-based Al Jazeera television, the network's Tunis director Lotfi Hajji said, warning that "what is happening is very dangerous, it is proof that freedom of the press is threatened".

Media organisation Reporters Without Borders condemned the move, while Amnesty International called it a "deeply worrying precedent signalling that human rights are in danger".

Saied's power-grab sparked jubilant rallies late Sunday by supporters who flooded the streets of Tunis, waving the national flag and sounding their car horns as fireworks lit up the sky.
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سيف الله
11-01-2021, 08:37 AM
Salaam

A general outlook on the current state of the Arab spring.



Blurb

In this insightful episode of the Blood Brothers Podcast, Dilly Hussain hosts journalist, political pundit and activist Sami Hamdi.
Topics of discussion include:

- What is ‘political Islam’ and should Muslims use the term “Islamist”?

- Has Islamism in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) become synonymous with the Muslim Brotherhood/Ikhwan?

- What is the future of Islamic political parties and movements in the MENA, namely the MB?

- Pitfalls of unrestricted political pragmatism - compromises and being fair/consistent in criticising/praising Islamist movements and figures.

- The plausibility of any meaningful Muslim unification emerging in the existing world order.


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