Audio By Carbonatix
Tunisian lawyers began a one-day nationwide strike on Thursday, with hundreds taking to the streets of the capital, to protest against the recent arrest of two of their colleagues, one of whom they say was tortured during his detention.
This is the second time this week Tunisian lawyers have staged a strike amid an escalation of the political crisis in the country following the arrest of two lawyers and two journalists last week in separate incidents.
Hundreds of opponents to President Kais Saied protested last week, demanding a date for free and fair elections. Saied, whose term ends this year, took over most state powers and shut down the elected parliament in 2021 in a move the opposition called a coup.
Tunisian police stormed, opens new tab the bar association's headquarters on Monday for the second time in two days and arrested Mahdi Zagrouba, who has criticized the president, after detaining Sonia Dahmani, another lawyer, over the weekend.
Some opposition parties described the storming of the Deanship of Lawyers' building as "a shock and major escalation".
The bar association and human rights groups said that Zagrouba was tortured during his detention and that he was suffering from severe bruises and traces of violence.
The Interior Ministry strongly denied the allegations and said that the lawyer was not subjected to any ill-treatment or torture.
“We categorically deny that the lawyer was subjected to torture or ill-treatment. It is a scenario to escape responsibility after it was proven that he assaulted a policeman during a protest this week,” ministry official Fakher Bouzghaia said.
Hundreds of lawyers gathered near the headquarters of the Palace of Justice, wearing uniforms and chanting slogans such as "take your hands off journalists and lawyers” and “No fear, no terror. power belongs to the people.”
Supporting their colleague Zaqrouba, the lawyers chanted “Mahdi never mind, freedoms are redeemed with blood.”
A Tunisian judge on Wednesday ordered the imprisonment of two journalists pending trial, their families and lawyers said, reinforcing fears of a widespread campaign aimed at silencing dissent and curbing free speech.
IFM radio journalists Mourad Zghidi and Borhen Bsaiss were detained on Saturday over political comments made on the radio, their lawyers said.
Latest Stories
-
Machu Picchu train crash leaves one dead and dozens injured
1 minute -
Heavy police presence in Sydney for New Year’s celebrations after Bondi attack
26 minutes -
Ghana not experiencing ‘dumsor’ despite occasional outages – Analyst
29 minutes -
ESLA stabilised energy sector but legacy debt remains major challenge – Analyst
31 minutes -
Peter Obi dumps LP, defects to ADC
50 minutes -
Proposed 5-Year Presidential Term Could Break Ghana Tradition of 8-Year Mandate
51 minutes -
Ghana Airways technical completion paves the way for a triple threat economic reset
58 minutes -
Cedi depreciation marked most disastrous period in Ghana’s economic management – Felix Kwakye Ofosu
1 hour -
Walewale, Bolgatanga police investigate deadly checkpoint shooting
1 hour -
Taxpayers to pay less under revised VAT structure from 2026 — GRA
1 hour -
Bullish Andre Ayew talks up NAC Breda challenge
2 hours -
Cybersecurity Authority warns public against festive season parcel delivery scams
2 hours -
Andre Ayew joins Dutch side NAC Breda till end of season
2 hours -
It’s fair to say that the gov’t has started well on economic management – Oppong Nkrumah
2 hours -
Mahama inherited the worst economic situation in Ghana’s history, supervised by the NPP – Felix Kwakye Ofosu
2 hours
