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Tunisia's Ennahda: Saied's power grab risks 'dismantling state'

This picture taken on October 6, 2019, shows Seifeddine Makhlouf, an official of the Ennahda party after casting his ballot at a polling station in the capital Tunis, during the third round of legislative elections since the North African country's 2011 revolution. (File photo by AFP)

Tunisia's biggest political party, Ennahda, has accused President Kais Saied of staging a power grab which risks "dismantling" the state.

Saied's plans "threaten to lead to the dismantling of the state," the party said in a statement on Tuesday.

"The maintenance of the exceptional measures indefinitely, along with the absence of a legitimate government and the suspension of the elected parliament threaten to lead to the dismantling of the state," Ennahdha said.

Saied's plans also risk "exacerbating the economic, financial and social" crisis currently besetting the country, the party added.

On Monday, Saied announced he had instituted transitional governing rules and would introduce a new electoral law in the unspecified future.

Habib Khedher, an Ennahda party official, on Facebook criticized Saied's move, saying that implementing transitional rules was equivalent to suspending the constitution.

Saied, who was elected in late 2019, dismissed the prime minister, invoked emergency powers, and assumed all executive powers while suspending parliament on July 25.

Ennahda had formed the largest bloc in parliament when the president suspended the legislature and removed lawmakers' immunity.

Meanwhile, two more lawmakers have been imprisoned by judiciary officials.

Seifeddine Makhlouf, a leader of the Karama party and critic of Saied, along with Nidal Saudi were sent to jail by a Tunisian military judge Tuesday, taking the total number of imprisoned lawmakers to five.

Rights groups have criticized the use of military courts to try civilians. They have also voiced concern at travel bans for people wanted on a variety of charges.

The Ennahda party, which was banned from political activities prior to the 2011 revolution, has consistently been a member of successive coalition governments since then. 


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