Berliner Boersenzeitung - Tunisia to vote on constitution seen as threat to democracy

EUR -
AED 4.005378
AFN 73.784953
ALL 98.629582
AMD 422.156065
ANG 1.96581
AOA 991.299654
ARS 1068.486705
AUD 1.621793
AWG 1.963405
AZN 1.862419
BAM 1.953028
BBD 2.202275
BDT 130.34443
BGN 1.955488
BHD 0.411025
BIF 3217.748422
BMD 1.090477
BND 1.42587
BOB 7.553246
BRL 6.076578
BSD 1.090747
BTN 91.699149
BWP 14.50435
BYN 3.569485
BYR 21373.358902
BZD 2.19859
CAD 1.504243
CDF 3138.394124
CHF 0.941051
CLF 0.036629
CLP 1010.698134
CNY 7.728649
CNH 7.740095
COP 4590.081491
CRC 564.296615
CUC 1.090477
CUP 28.897654
CVE 110.109248
CZK 25.265235
DJF 193.799882
DKK 7.460949
DOP 65.616883
DZD 145.483845
EGP 52.993719
ERN 16.357162
ETB 131.035046
FJD 2.452211
FKP 0.8344
GBP 0.835097
GEL 2.960684
GGP 0.8344
GHS 17.375263
GIP 0.8344
GMD 74.699016
GNF 9409.689782
GTQ 8.43503
GYD 228.19512
HKD 8.46675
HNL 27.142482
HRK 7.512332
HTG 143.596221
HUF 400.753963
IDR 16981.351743
ILS 4.115527
IMP 0.8344
INR 91.676333
IQD 1428.872276
IRR 45911.826365
ISK 149.318866
JEP 0.8344
JMD 172.674956
JOD 0.772822
JPY 163.414579
KES 140.703857
KGS 93.233176
KHR 4430.610911
KMF 490.172195
KPW 981.4295
KRW 1480.677609
KWD 0.334446
KYD 0.908906
KZT 529.256501
LAK 23921.162976
LBP 97674.142024
LKR 319.585009
LRD 209.96108
LSL 19.123661
LTL 3.219897
LVL 0.659619
LYD 5.227558
MAD 10.692975
MDL 19.267569
MGA 5017.902064
MKD 61.538809
MMK 3541.828367
MNT 3705.442558
MOP 8.724799
MRU 43.181523
MUR 50.401877
MVR 16.738909
MWK 1891.22482
MXN 21.081651
MYR 4.683615
MZN 69.69007
NAD 19.123661
NGN 1783.1449
NIO 40.142849
NOK 11.762469
NPR 146.719117
NZD 1.790545
OMR 0.419786
PAB 1.090752
PEN 4.063016
PGK 4.289932
PHP 62.625035
PKR 302.948095
PLN 4.294682
PYG 8536.885241
QAR 3.975976
RON 4.974976
RSD 117.022243
RUB 104.253977
RWF 1469.394559
SAR 4.094749
SBD 9.050229
SCR 16.408016
SDG 655.923373
SEK 11.370823
SGD 1.426868
SHP 0.8344
SLE 24.563035
SLL 22866.764344
SOS 623.318302
SRD 34.989093
STD 22570.682481
SVC 9.543501
SYP 2739.857713
SZL 19.119779
THB 36.274191
TJS 11.615843
TMT 3.827576
TND 3.357435
TOP 2.554009
TRY 37.368107
TTD 7.405389
TWD 35.118825
TZS 2967.727994
UAH 44.937635
UGX 3997.327362
USD 1.090477
UYU 45.535172
UZS 13939.154925
VEF 3950312.013259
VES 42.351611
VND 27098.365751
VUV 129.463712
WST 3.054628
XAF 655.01245
XAG 0.034973
XAU 0.000412
XCD 2.94707
XDR 0.81504
XOF 655.030445
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.000963
ZAR 19.17036
ZMK 9815.603487
ZMW 28.821966
ZWL 351.133308
  • SCS

    0.0700

    12.98

    +0.54%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.98

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    1.7400

    61.23

    +2.84%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.69

    -0.08%

  • BCC

    0.6100

    142.98

    +0.43%

  • GSK

    0.3000

    39.13

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    78.1

    +0.96%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.22

    -0.23%

  • RIO

    0.4700

    67.7

    +0.69%

  • NGG

    0.6500

    66.89

    +0.97%

  • BCE

    -0.4600

    32.56

    -1.41%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    35.45

    +0.76%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    31.99

    -0.38%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    47.38

    +1.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    7.03

    +0.43%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.68

    +0.31%

Tunisia to vote on constitution seen as threat to democracy
Tunisia to vote on constitution seen as threat to democracy / Photo: FETHI BELAID - AFP

Tunisia to vote on constitution seen as threat to democracy

Tunisians will vote Monday on a constitution that would give President Kais Saied almost unchecked powers, a key moment in his plan to overhaul the political system in the birthplace of the Arab Spring.

Text size:

The referendum takes place a year to the day after Saied sacked the government and suspended parliament in a decisive blow against the country's often chaotic young democracy.

His opponents have called for a boycott, but while observers have predicted most Tunisians will snub the poll, few doubt the charter will pass.

"The biggest unknown in this referendum is the turnout and whether it will be low or very low," said analyst Youssef Cherif.

Those who vote yes "will do so either because they like the president or because they hate those who have governed Tunisia" since the 2011 uprising that toppled autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, he added.

The text aims to replace the mixed presidential-parliamentary system enshrined in a 2014 constitution, which saw Tunisia praised as the sole democracy to emerge from the 2011 Arab uprisings.

The leader of Saied's "new republic" would have ultimate executive power and would appoint a government without the need for a confidence vote in parliament.

The president would also head the armed forces and appoint judges, who would be banned from striking.

Saied's rivals, including the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party that has dominated Tunisian politics since 2011, accuse him of dragging the country back to autocracy.

The process leading up to the referendum has also been widely criticised.

"People don't know what they're voting on, or why," Cherif said.

- 'The net is tightening' -

Political analyst Hamadi Redissi said that, unlike in 2014, there was little debate involving all stakeholders over the text that was "hastily written in just a few weeks".

Saied, who since last year has ruled by decree and seized control of the judiciary and the electoral board, held an online public consultation ostensibly meant to guide a committee -- appointed by himself -- in drafting a new constitution.

But Sadeq Belaid, the legal expert who led that process has disavowed Saied's draft, saying it was "completely different" from what his committee had submitted and warning it could install "a dictatorial regime".

Saied released a slightly amended document little more than two weeks before the vote, but even under the new draft, the president would be virtually impossible to force out of office.

Tunisia "is moving towards dictatorship, in the Latin sense of the term, where the president dictates everything", Redissi said.

The country would not become like China or Egypt but could end up resembling Turkey or Russia, he added.

Isabelle Werenfels, researcher at German think tank SWP, warned Tunisia was "moving towards a closed system".

"If you look at the ongoing dismantling of institutions for monitoring freedom, democracy, and new rules, it looks like the net is tightening," she said.

- Economic woes -

Campaigning by those registered to publicly express a position on the constitution has been lukewarm.

Just seven organisations or people are registered for the "no" campaign, compared with 144 for "yes".

Billboards bearing the Tunisian flag -- banned under the government's own rules -- have appeared in Tunis carrying a sentence from an open letter published by Saied, urging a "yes" vote "so the state doesn't falter and so the goals of the revolution are achieved".

While recent elections have seen low participation, Saied himself, a former legal scholar seen as incorruptible and removed from the widely mistrusted political elite, was elected in a 2019 landslide on 58 percent turnout.

Today, Tunisians are dealing with grinding economic woes aggravated by the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine, and "very few people are interested in politics", Cherif said.

Saied will urgently need to find solutions for an economy dogged by high inflation, youth unemployment as high as 40 percent and a third of the population facing poverty.

The heavily indebted country is in negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for a bailout package, but experts have warned that the liberalising reforms the lender is likely to demand in exchange could spark social unrest.

Meanwhile, fears are growing for Tunisia's widely praised, if faulty, democracy.

Freedom House and The Economist had already reclassified Tunisia from "free" to "partially free", Cherif noted.

"The fact that people can express themselves freely or go and vote 'no' without going to prison shows that we're not in a traditional dictatorship," he said.

But, he added, "this constitution could create an authoritarian regime resembling the regimes Tunisia experienced before 2011."

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)