TUNIS: Tunisians on Sunday protested against President Kais Saied, criminating him of assessing one- man rule in the North African country after he dissolved congress last month.
A political extremity in the country boosted last month when further than half of the members of congress held an online session to drop Saied’s rulings.
“ We’re facing a failed absolutism that’s leading the country to an profitable disaster. We’ll continue to protest in the thoroughfares until a achievement is forced to reverse its opinions,” Chaima Issa, an activist, said.
Numerous members of congress shared in the kick on Sunday, which took place with a heavy presence ofanti-riot police. Protesters chanted “ The people want to erect the achievement.”
“ We’ll continue to repel the achievement and we won’t retreat. We’ll not accept this absolutism,” Samira Chaouchi, one of two deputy speakers of congress, said.
After last month’s online session, which Saied dissolved,anti-terrorism police summoned the main
opposition figure Rached Ghannouchi and other lawgivers for questioning, egging review from abroad as well as at home.
Ghannouchi, who’s the congress’s speaker and head of Islamist Ennahda party, said other virtual sessions would be convened.
A delegation from the European Parliament will visit Tunisia on Monday to prompt the return of the republic established after the 2011 revolution that ended the autocratic rule of the late President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Saied, took control of administrative power in the middle of last time and has ruled by decree, which his opponents describe as a achievement.
He has rejected his opponents allegations and said he’d hold addresses on political reforms, but that “ serpents and stealers” would not share.
Saied has preliminarily said he’d form a commission to rewrite the constitution, put it to a vote in July and also hold administrative choices in December.
The country’s two main parties Ennahda and Free Indigenous, which are plaintively opposed, have both said they will oppose those plans.