On Saturday, thousands of Tunisians demonstrated in the capital Tunis, decrying a coup by President Kais Saied and demanding accountability for the country’s long-running economic crisis, Africa Today News, New York has gathered.
Saied staged a dramatic power grab in July last year and later pushed through a constitution enshrining his one-man rule, in what critics have called a return to autocracy in the only democracy to have emerged from the Arab Spring.
Protesters in central Tunis chanted, “Down, down”, “Revolution against dictator Kais” and “The coup will fall.”
The march was organised by the National Salvation Front, a coalition of opposition parties including the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha that had dominated Tunisia’s parliament before its dissolution by Saied.
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Ali Laarayedh, Tunisia’s former prime minister and a senior Ennahdha official, told reporters that the protest was an expression of “anger at the state of affairs under Kais Saied”.
“We are telling him to leave.”
Saied’s power grab was welcomed by some Tunisians tired of what they saw as a fractious and corrupt system established after the 2011 revolution that ousted late dictator Zine El Abidine Ali.
But a worsening economic situation, compounded by supply shortages in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, has agitated many in the North African country of 12 million.
If Saied stays, “Tunisia will have no future,” said Laarayedh, citing growing despair, poverty and unemployment.
The National Salvation Front has announced it will boycott a December vote to elect a new parliament with limited powers.
Ennahdha’s deep ideological rival, the secular Free Destourian Party (PDL), also organised a protest in the capital on Saturday.
Saied “is doing nothing, and things are only getting worse”, said Souad, a pensioner in her 60s at the secular party’s demonstration.
Some of the protesters carried empty containers to symbolise the rising cost of water due to inflation, which hit 9.1 percent in September.
Africa Today News, New York reports that cash-strapped Tunisia is in talks with the International Monetary Fund for a bailout loan of about $2 billion.