Jailed Tunisia opposition figure handed 12 years in third trial

This is the third trial against Moussi, who was initially sentenced in August 2024 to two years in prison under Decree 54, a law Saied enacted in 2022 to combat “false news.” (AFP)
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Updated 13 December 2025
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Jailed Tunisia opposition figure handed 12 years in third trial

  • Dozens of opposition figures were recently sentenced to harsh prison terms in a mass trial on charges of conspiracy against state security

TUNIS: Jailed Tunisian opposition figure Abir Moussi was sentenced to an additional 12 years in prison on Thursday under a law criminalizing any “attack aimed at changing the form of government,” her lawyer told AFP.
A fierce critic of both President Kais Saied and the Islamist-inspired opposition Ennahdha party, Moussi has been in custody since her arrest in October 2023 outside the presidential palace where her party says she was seeking to lodge appeals against Saied’s decrees.
The latest sentence was in connection to that incident.
This is the third trial against Moussi, who was initially sentenced in August 2024 to two years in prison under Decree 54, a law Saied enacted in 2022 to combat “false news.” That sentence was later reduced on appeal.
Last June, just after completing her first jail term, she was sentenced again under the same law to two years in prison. The appeal process in that case is underway.
In a statement released before Friday’s verdict, the Free Destourian Party condemned “the injustice suffered by the party’s president, Abir Moussi, who has been arbitrarily detained since October 3, 2023.”
She is suspected by her detractors of wanting to return to the authoritarianism of former president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, overthrown in Tunisia’s 2011 revolt.
Meanwhile Saied, elected in 2019, has ruled by decree since a sweeping 2021 power grab and many of his opponents have been jailed.
Dozens of opposition figures were recently sentenced to harsh prison terms in a mass trial on charges of conspiracy against state security.
Others are being prosecuted under Decree 54, a law criticized by human rights advocates for its overly broad interpretation by the courts.
 

 


Syria gunman who killed Americans was to be fired from security forces for ‘extremism’: ministry

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Syria gunman who killed Americans was to be fired from security forces for ‘extremism’: ministry

DAMASCUS: Syria’s interior ministry said on Sunday that the gunman who killed three Americans in the central Palmyra region the previous day was a member of the security forces who was to have been fired for extremism.
Two US troops and a civilian interpreter died in the attack on Saturday, which the US Central Command said had been carried out by an alleged Daesh group (IS) militant who was then killed.
The Syrian authorities “had decided to fire him” from the security forces before the attack for holding “extremist Islamist ideas” and had planned to do so on Sunday, interior ministry spokesman Noureddine Al-Baba told state television.
A Syrian security official told AFP on Sunday that “11 members of the general security forces were arrested and brought in for questioning after the attack.”
The official who spoke on condition of anonymity said the gunman had belonged to the security forces “for more than 10 months and was posted to several cities before being transferred to Palmyra.”
Palmyra, home to UNESCO-listed ancient ruins, was once controlled by IS during the height of its territorial expansion in Syria.
The incident is the first of its kind reported since Islamist-led forces overthrew longtime Syrian ruler Bashar Assad in December last year, and rekindled the country’s ties with the United States.
Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said the soldiers “were conducting a key leader engagement” in support of counter-terrorism operations when the attack occurred, while US envoy to Syria Tom Barrack said the ambush targeted “a joint US-Syrian government patrol.”
US President Donald Trump called the incident “an Daesh attack against the US, and Syria, in a very dangerous part of Syria, that is not fully controlled by them,” using another term for the group.
He said the three other US troops injured in the attack were “doing well.”