Audio By Carbonatix
A Tunisian court on Monday sentenced Sonia Dhamani, a prominent lawyer and critical voice of President Kais Saied, to two years, lawyers said, in a case rights groups say marks a deepening crackdown on dissent in the North African country.
Dhamani's lawyers withdrew from the trial after the judge refused to adjourn the session, claiming Dhamani was being tried twice for the same act.
The court sentenced Dhamani for statements criticising practices against migrants from sub-Saharan Africa.
Lawyer Bassem Trifi said that the court sentenced Dhamni to two years calling the verdict "a grave injustice".
"What's happening is a farce. Sonia is being tried twice for the same statement.", lawyer Sami Ben Ghazi, another lawyer for Dhamani, told Reuters.
Dhamani was arrested last year after making comments during a television appearance that questioned the government’s stance on undocumented African migrants in Tunisia.
The case was brought under Tunisia’s controversial cybercrime law, Decree 54, which has been widely condemned by international and local rights groups.
Most opposition leaders, some journalists, and critics of Saied have been imprisoned since Saied seized control of most powers, dissolved the elected parliament, and began ruling by decree in 2021, moves the opposition has described as a coup.
Saied rejects the charges and says his actions are legal and aimed at ending years of chaos and rampant corruption.
Human rights groups and activists say Saied has turned Tunisia into an open-air prison and is using the judiciary and police to target his political opponents.
Saied rejects these accusations, saying he will not be a dictator and seeks to hold everyone accountable equally, regardless of their position or name.
Latest Stories
-
AGRA Ghana salutes Farmers as nation marks Farmers’ Day
2 minutes -
Bawumia’s favourability rises, widens lead in new Global Info analytics survey
4 minutes -
Minority criticises government for failing farmers amid unsold rice crisis
10 minutes -
Why Tsatsu Tsikata’s legacy is Ghana’s future
14 minutes -
Farmers need support all year, not just awards’ — Prof. Boadi
23 minutes -
Spotify ranks ‘Konnected Minds’ Ghana’s No. 1 Podcast for 2025
26 minutes -
Minority caucus push for modern AI-driven agricultural and fisheries revolution
28 minutes -
Mahama reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to ending HIV/AIDS by 2030
28 minutes -
Martin Kpebu poised to defend claims against Special Prosecutor – Counsel
33 minutes -
Kareweh criticises govts for policies that look good but achieve little in agriculture
34 minutes -
Galamsey is killing our cocoa, our water, our future – Minority warns of food security meltdown
37 minutes -
Keta is drowning, not fishing – Minority demands urgent fix to premix fuel breakdown
51 minutes -
Rising attacks on journalists demand better coordination with Security agencies — MFWA
60 minutes -
A nation that left its farmers behind – Minority blasts gov’t over GH¢5bn grain disaster
1 hour -
Move to scrap OSP is premature, Inusah Fuseini tells Majority caucus
1 hour
