Tunisia arrests prominent lawyer and activist

Prominent Tunisian lawyer Ayachi Hammami was arrested Tuesday, colleagues said, after he was sentenced to five years for plotting against the state in a trial denounced by activists as politically motivated. (X/@brirmijihed)
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Updated 02 December 2025
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Tunisia arrests prominent lawyer and activist

  • In a video posted after his arrest on his Facebook account, Hammami said: “If you’re watching this I’ve been arrested“
  • He said last week’s ruling was “in reality a political decision made by Saied and his government“

TUNIS: A prominent Tunisian lawyer was arrested Tuesday, colleagues said, after he was sentenced to five years for plotting against the state in a trial denounced by activists as politically motivated.
Ayachi Hammami, a rights activist and staunch critic of President Kais Saied, was among some 40 Tunisian opposition figures sentenced last week up to 45 years for “conspiracy against state security” and “belonging to a terrorist group,” according to court documents viewed by AFP.
“They didn’t give him enough time to overturn the appeal,” his lawyer, Amine Bouker, told AFP, arguing that Hammami should have had 10 days to overturn his conviction.
In a video posted after his arrest on his Facebook account, Hammami said: “If you’re watching this I’ve been arrested.”
He said last week’s ruling was “in reality a political decision made by Saied and his government to imprison tens and tens of Tunisians.”
“This is his answer to fixing our problems in education, transportation, health care, and other sectors,” Hammami said.
“All he does is stigmatize those who disagree with him.”
Tunisia emerged from the Arab Spring era of revolts as a democracy but, after Saied staged a sweeping power grab in 2021, rights groups have criticized a major rollback on freedoms.
Dozens of Saied’s critics have been prosecuted or jailed, including on terrorism-related charges and under a law the president enacted in 2022 to prohibit “spreading false news.”
Last Thursday, the European Parliament voted to urge Tunisia to release “all those detained for exercising their right to freedom of expression, including political prisoners and human rights defenders.”
But Saied condemned the resolution as “blatant interference,” saying the European Union could “learn lessons from us on rights and freedoms.”


Tunisia’s powerful UGTT union announces a nationwide strike on January 21

Updated 9 sec ago
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Tunisia’s powerful UGTT union announces a nationwide strike on January 21

  • The looming clash could cripple key public sectors and strain a government with scarce finances

TUNIS: Tunisia’s powerful UGTT union announced a nationwide strike on January 21 to protest restrictions on union rights and demand wage-increase negotiations, the Achaab union newspaper said on Friday, escalating its standoff with President Kais Saied.
The looming clash could cripple key public sectors and strain a government with scarce finances, raising the risk of social unrest amid growing frustration and poor public services.