Friday, June 19, 2026 | Muharram 3, 1448 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
26°C / 26°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Tunisian president dissolves top judicial watchdog

Supporters of Tunisian President Kais Saied carry national flags and banners during a protest against the Supreme Judicial Council in Tunis. - Reuters
Supporters of Tunisian President Kais Saied carry national flags and banners during a protest against the Supreme Judicial Council in Tunis. - Reuters
minus
plus

TUNIS: Tunisian President Kais Saied on Sunday dissolved a top independent judicial watchdog accusing it of bias, the latest controversial move since he sacked the government last year. Saied has broadened his grip on power since July 25, when he sacked the government and froze parliament before moving to rule by decree in Tunisia -- the cradle of the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings that ousted a series of autocratic leaders.


Many in the North African nation welcomed his moves against a political system described as corrupt and ineffective, in the only democracy to have emerged from the revolts.


But political figures and rights groups have warned of a slide towards authoritarianism, and world leaders have expressed deep concern.


In a move sparking further unease, Saied early Sunday announced he was dissolving the Supreme Judicial Council (CSM) during a meeting with government ministers.


The council "is a thing of the past", he said according to video footage released by the Tunisian presidency. He accused the CSM, an independent constitutional body set up in 2016 to guarantee the good functioning and independence of the judiciary, of serving political interests.


"In this council, positions and appointments are sold and made according to affiliations," said the head of state.


"You cannot imagine the money that certain judges have been able to receive, billions and billions," he added.


Observers say the government is seeking to clamp down on the Ennahdha party, which has controlled parliament and the various governments since the 2011 revolution toppled veteran leader Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.


The International Commission of Jurists said the president's corruption accusations were "unfounded", saying the CSM council "has defended the independence of the judiciary" and that "any decree to dissolve it is illegal and unconstitutional."


"Its dissolution would mean the end of the separation of powers," it added.


The president accused the CSM of corruption and of delaying politically sensitive investigations into the 2013 assassinations of left-wing opposition figures Chokri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi.


The IS group claimed both killings, while Ennahdha, which has denounced Saied's power grab as a "coup", has been accused by many of blocking the investigations. "Unfortunately, in this country, some judges in the courts have manipulated the Chokri Belaid case," said Saied in the video.


Belaid was shot three times outside his home in February 2013, and Brahmi was killed in similar circumstances in July the same year.


The "July 25 movement" -- composed of Saied supporters -- on Saturday called on the president to dissolve the CSM in order to "purge" the judiciary of "corrupt magistrates". - AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
Most Read
No Image
CBO sets deadline for banknote replacement The Youngest Omani Pilot: A Life Shaped by Flight Rainfall forecast to cool heatwave conditions in al Hajar areas The question Oman has been asking for 40 years
FOLLOW US
arrow up
home icon