Tunisia's new parliament convenes for first time since dissolution in 2021
The Hindu
Tunisia’s new parliament has convened for the first time after the president suspended the previous legislature in 2021
Tunisia's new parliament convened on March 13, the first time the country has had a functioning legislature since the President had the previous parliament sealed off by the army in 2021.
The main Opposition coalition declared it won't recognise the new parliament, whose members were chosen in December and January in elections boycotted by the President's opponents and ignored by the masses. Just 11% of voters cast ballots.
During Monday's inaugural session, the lawmakers will elect a new Speaker of parliament to succeed the leader of the Islamist movement Ennahdha, Rached Ghannouchi, whose party had the largest number of members in the outgoing parliament.
Unusually, only journalists from state broadcasters and the official state news agency were allowed inside the parliament for the opening session, and dozens of reporters protested outside. The session comes amid a growing crackdown on Opposition Islamists and independent media and other dissenting voices, and on migrants from sub-Saharan Africa.
President Kais Saied suspended the previous parliament in July 2021 in what he said was an effort to save the country. Mr. Saied and many Tunisians at the time blamed the Islamist legislators for the country's economic and social crises.
Mr. Saied has since legislated by decree and moved to amass more and more power. That has raised concerns internationally, because Tunisia was the birthplace of the Arab Spring uprisings a decade ago and the only country to emerge with a new democratic system.
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