President Saied lines up 400 Tunisian judges for dismissal

President Saied lines up 400 Tunisian judges for dismissal
The wave of dismissals, scheduled to take place after the constitutional referendum on 25 July, is seen by many as part of a wider effort by Saied to cleanse the Tunisian judiciary of dissenting voices.
2 min read
19 June, 2022
Weeks of strike action have bought the judicial system in Tunisia to a halt throughout June [Getty]

A fresh purge of 400 Tunisian judges is being prepared ahead of Saied’s constitutional referendum, a top Tunisian judicial source has revealed.  

“There is a list of 400 members of the judiciary that have been lined up for removal after the referendum on 25 July,” said Mourad al-Masoudi in an interview with Arabi21

Al-Masoudi, head of the Young Tunisian Judges’ Association, pledged that “members of the judiciary are committed to defending the role of justice, and remain firm in preserving the independence of the judiciary in the face of abuse of executive power.”

The news comes in the wake of a three-week strike by Tunisian judges after President Kais Saied dismissed 57 of them on 1 June, accusing the judicial branch of extensive corruption, cover-ups and protecting terrorist suspects. 

On Saturday, bodies representing the judiciary announced a further week of strikes, culminating in a ‘day of rage’ - the date of which is yet to be announced. 

Saied is seeking to overhaul the constitution to give the presidency more powers, against the backdrop of a tanking economy and fears of a public finance crisis. He intends to put the new constitution to a referendum on July 25.

Saied has appointed a new electoral commission, casting doubts over the credibility of any vote. He has also appointed a temporary judicial council and sacked dozens of judges.

His supporters say he is standing up to elite forces whose bungling and corruption have condemned Tunisia to a decade of political paralysis and economic stagnation.

However Tunisia's main political parties have said they will boycott the referendum, and the powerful UGTT labour union has refused to take part in talks on the new constitution.