Pre-Election Crackdown in Tunisia as Islamists Arrested En Masse
Dozens of members of Tunisia’s largest opposition party were arrested this week ahead of the campaign season for the presidential election.
Dozens of members of Tunisia’s largest opposition party were arrested this week ahead of the formal start of campaign season for the North African state’s presidential election, lawyers and officials from the party said on Friday.
Ennahda, the Islamist party that rose to power in the aftermath of the country’s Arab Spring, said on Friday that tallies collected by its local branches suggested at least 80 men and women from the party had been apprehended as part of a countrywide sweep that ensnared members from 10 regions.
For weeks democracy and human rights advocates have been calling on the EU to put more pressure on the government, as they raise concerns that the election is unlikely to be free and fair.
The EU’s approach however is dominated by its determination to reduce migration. Tunisia is a key transit point for migrants from Syria, Bangladesh and sub-Saharan African nations trying to reach Europe.
And the fear that has been expressed by both analysts and democracy activists is that the EU may overlook the backsliding of democracy in Tunisia as it prioritises stopping the migrants.
The EU-Tunisia Migration Agreement that’s been agreed with President Kais Saied’s government is designed to slow down the numbers of migrants attempting the Mediterranean crossing by boat. In return Tunisia receives hundreds of millions of euros of financial aid.
Nation-wide crackdown on the Islamic Ennahda opposition party
In a statement, Ennahda called the arrests “an unprecedented campaign of raids and violations of the most basic rights guaranteed by law.” The party had counted at least 80 arrests and was in the process of confirming at least 116 total, including six women, lawyer Latifa Habbechi said.
Former Minister of Youth and Sports Ahmed Gaaloul, a member of the party’s executive committee and advisor to its imprisoned leader Rached Ghannouchi, said the arrests included high-ranking party officials and had continued over Friday afternoon. Among them were Mohamed Guelwi, a member of the party’s executive committee, and Mohamed Ali Boukhatim, a regional party leader from Ben Arous, a suburb of Tunis.
The mass arrests are the latest to mar an already turbulent election season in Tunisia.
With political apathy rampant and the country’s most prominent opposition figures in prison, President Kais Saied has long been expected to win a second term without significant challenge. But the past few months have seen major upheaval nonetheless. Saied has sacked the majority of his cabinet and authorities have arrested more of his potential opponents. The country’s election authority made up of members he appointed has defied court orders to keep certain challengers off of the October 6 ballot. Campaign season formally begins on Saturday.
Those moves came after months of cascading arrests of journalists, lawyers and leading civil society figures, including many critics of the president charged under a controversial anti-fake news law that human rights groups say has been increasingly used to quash criticism.
A human rights advocate posted that the arrest of Sihem Bensedrine, the president of the national truth commission, emphasised the “democratic backslide” underway in Tunisia.
The vast majority of those arrested were senior party members of the party involved in Tunisia’s transitional justice process, which includes Ennahda members who were tortured in the years before President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali became the first Arab dictator toppled in the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings.
Lawyer Latifa Habbechi said that roughly 90% were people who were incarcerated under Ben Ali and former president Habib Bourguiba and 70% were older than 60. She added that the names of those arrested corresponded with party documents listing victims of the dictatorship involved in the transitional justice process.
The arrests came as hundreds of Tunisians protested in the capital Tunis, decrying the emergence of what they called a police state ahead of the 6 Oct election. They were roundly condemned by other parties.
Tunisia’s globally acclaimed transitional justice process is a decade-old initiative designed to help victims who suffered at the hands of the government.
“These arrests come as a sign of further narrowing and deviation of the electoral process aiming at spreading fear and emptying the upcoming election of any chance for a real democratic competition,” Work and Accomplishment, a party led by former Ennahda member Abdellatif Mekki, said in a statement on Friday.
Mekki, who served as Tunisia’s Health Minister from 2011 to 2014, was also arrested in July as part of an investigation into a 2014 murder that his attorneys decried as politically motivated. Tunisia’s election authority has said it will defy an administrative court order and keep him off of next month’s ballot.