Tunisia judge imprisons former Prime Minister Ali Laarayedh

Tunisia judge imprisons former Prime Minister Ali Laarayedh
Tunisia's anti-terrorism judge has decided to imprison a former prime minister and senior official in the Islamist opposition Ennahda party.
2 min read
20 December, 2022
Ennahda denied in a statement accusations of terrorism [Getty/archive]

Tunisia's anti-terrorism judge decided to imprison Ali Laarayedh, a former prime minister and senior official in the Islamist opposition Ennahda party, after hours of investigation into suspicions of sending jihadists to Syria, lawyers said on Monday.

"The investigative judge issued a prison decision against former Prime Minister Ali Laarayedh in what is known as the deportation jihadists file," lawyer Ines Harrath said.

"This is true," Mokthat Jmayi, another Laarayedh lawyer, told Reuters, without giving further details

Ennahda denied in a statement accusations of terrorism, calling it a political attack on a foe of President Kais Saied to hide "the catastrophic failure of the elections".

Only 11.2% of Tunisian voters cast ballots in Saturday's parliamentary elections, Farouk Bouasker, the head of the electoral commission said, after most political parties boycotted the vote as a charade to shore up President Kais Saied's power.

After the turnout figures were announced, major parties, among them the Salvation Front, which includes Ennahda and its arch-rival, the Free Constitutional Party, said Saied had no legitimacy and should step down, calling for massive protests.

Ennahda, the main opposition party, has accused Saied of an anti-democratic coup since he seized most powers last year, shutting down the parliament and moving to rule by decree, powers he has largely formalised with a new constitution ratified in a July referendum.

Security and official sources estimated that around 6,000 Tunisians travelled to Syria and Iraq last decade, to join jihadist groups including Islamic State. Many were killed there while others escaped and returned to Tunisia.

(Reuters)