Audio By Carbonatix
Thousands of Tunisians have demonstrated against President Kais Saied as the country faces a deepening political and economic crisis.
A crowd gathered in the capital Tunis to demand the end of his government.
Tunisians who supported Mr Saied since he came to power in 2021 have grown increasingly frustrated with the state of the economy.
The protests come 12 years to the day since former dictator Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was forced into exile.
Tunisia's uprising is often held up as the sole success of the Arab Spring revolts across the region - but it has not led to stability, either economically or politically.
With debts piling up, the country has struggled to import basic goods, including staples such as coffee, milk and sugar.
The government has so far been unable to secure an international bailout leading one protester to tell the AFP news agency "the coup has brought us famine and poverty".
In Tunis' central Habib Bourguiba Avenue, a traditional site for demonstrations, Said Anouar Ali, 34, said: "Tunisia is going through the most dangerous time in its history.
"Saied took control of all authority and struck at democracy. The economy is collapsing. We will not be silent," he added.
The protests in the capital were organised by two different opposition groups with a heavy police presence outside the Interior Ministry to prevent scuffles.
Separately, protesters also marched against Mr Saied's seizure of near total power.
In 2021, the president sacked the prime minister, suspended parliament and pushed through a constitution enshrining his one-man rule.
The new constitution replaced one drafted soon after the Arab Spring in 2011, which saw Tunisia overthrow late dictator Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali. It gave the head of state full executive control and supreme command of the army.
Mr Saied has justified his actions by saying he needed new powers to break a cycle of political paralysis and economic decay.
Latest Stories
-
KMA boss declares war on sex workers, migrant beggars in Kumasi
1 minute -
Fuel prices, policy rigidities and the case for a Pricing Regulatory Commission
2 minutes -
UK High Commissioner urges patience as Ghanaian PhD students await scholarship payments
7 minutes -
Kotoko’s Karim Zito and Prince Yaw Owusu charged after GoldStars game
13 minutes -
Joy FM sets stage for Big Workout 2026 at University of Ghana Stadium
17 minutes -
Today’s front pages: Monday, January 19, 2026
47 minutes -
Ghanaian family disowns relative after fraud conviction in Australia
57 minutes -
GoldBod data shows 98.8% of Ghana’s small scale gold exports went to Dubai and India in 2025
58 minutes -
Kofi Bentil says Ofori-Atta is hesitant to return over treatment, not charges
1 hour -
GSA debunks cement price hike claims, says Jan. 19 increase is false
1 hour -
Driver rams into robbers, foils MoMo robbery at Darkuman
1 hour -
Smallholders at the centre: Why innovation and diversification are pivotal for Africa’s food future
1 hour -
Plans underway to establish museum on northern Ghana’s slave history in Navrongo
1 hour -
4 killed including two children as runaway truck ploughed into Salon at Kumawu
2 hours -
Open letter to Chief Justice on judicial security, specialised prosecution and extradition
2 hours
