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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Tunisia unions urge speedy new government after takeover

Tunisian army barricade the parliament building in the capital Tunis, after the president dismissed the prime minister and ordered parliament closed for 30 days. - AFP file photo
Tunisian army barricade the parliament building in the capital Tunis, after the president dismissed the prime minister and ordered parliament closed for 30 days. - AFP file photo
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TUNIS: Tunisia's powerful UGTT trade union body has urged President Kais Saied to form a new government, nearly two weeks after he assumed executive power and sacked the prime minister.


Saied also suspended parliament for 30 days on July 25, and has since dismissed four ministers and other top officials.


The president has dismissed accusations by the largest party in parliament that he staged a "coup".


He insists that he acted under the constitution, which allows the head of state to take unspecified exceptional measures in the event of an "imminent threat".


"We call for speeding up the appointment of a head of government" and as "a smaller and harmonious rescue government", said a UGTT statement released late on Tuesday.


It said any delay in forming a new government risked worsening the political vacuum in the North African country.


It would also "make it difficult to emerge from the current social and economic crisis", said the UGTT, which backed the president's move last month.


Tunisia is currently suffering one of the world's worst outbreaks of the Covid-19 pandemic in terms of death toll.


It has seen more than 20,000 deaths from a population of around 12 million.


On July 25, Saied announced measures that included freezing parliamentary activity for 30 days, lifting parliamentary immunity and sacking Hichem Mechichi as both premier and interior minister.


He later fired the defence, justice, economy and communications technology ministers, as well as top officials.


New economy and communications technology ministers were named on Monday.


On Tuesday, Saied dismissed the governor of the Sfax region and Tunisia's ambassador to the United States, without saying why in either case.


Last month, the UGTT -- which played a key role in the 2011 Arab Spring uprising -- said Saied had acted "in accordance" with the constitution to "prevent imminent danger and to restore the normal functioning" of the state.


While urging the speedy formation of a new government, the union body's latest statement also said Saied's "exceptional" measures respond to the demands of the people.


It called them "a definitive solution to the complexity of the crisis the country is going through in the absence of any other solutions".


The president's move has seen him lose little popular support. But his main adversary, the Ennahdha party, accuses him of staging a coup. - AFP


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