About 2,000 Tunisians rallied in their capital yesterday to protest President Kais Saied’s steps to tighten his grip on power which they labelled “a coup d’etat”.
It was the largest demonstration since Saied on July 25 sacked prime minister Hichem Mechichi, suspended parliament and granted himself judicial powers, a move he followed up on Wednesday by announcing “exceptional measures” that allow him to rule by decree.
Protesters waving the red and white Tunisian flag gathered outside the municipal theatre in Tunis, well before the demonstration’s start, and shouted slogans in defence of the 2014 national charter.
“Constitution, freedom and national dignity,” chanted the demonstrators. They also demanded “national unity against populism” and called for the “end of the Kais Saied regime”. Security forces were deployed in large numbers along Bourguiba Avenue, which runs through the heart of the capital, with armoured cars, police vans and metal barriers set up to control access to different areas.
The president made his power grab after months of political stalemate and during the Covid-19 pandemic which further aggravated the country’s economic and social difficulties.
Large crowds cheered his move all over the country at the time, but the mood was hostile at the smaller demonstration in Tunis yesterday.
Some shouted “Get out, get out”, repeating the slogan of protests that started in December 2010 and culminated in the resignation of Tunisia’s dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali on January 14, 2011 after 23 years in power.
Ben Ali’s fall marked the start of the Arab Spring revolts around the region, in which Tunisia emerged as the only democracy.
“Things are going back to the Ben Ali period, to a dictatorship,” said Nade, 27, a woman attending the protest with her mother.
Nade, who works as an administrator, said she is worried because it was thanks to the 2011 revolution that Tunisians “finally had rights”, which they don’t want to lose.
Yet Saied has placed “all the power in the hands of only one man,” himself, she said.
Nearby, a protester in his 60s said he had come “to defend the constitution,” fearful that the country could fall back into “dictatorship”.