Tunisia's National Salvation Front holds rally despite ban on protests

The National Salvation Front coalition combines Tunisia's biggest party, the Ennahda, the Stop the Coup protest movement and some other political parties, demanding that President Kais Saied step down.

Up to a thousand protesters then pushed a way through a police cordon to reach Habib Bourguiba Avenue where most rallies take place.
Reuters

Up to a thousand protesters then pushed a way through a police cordon to reach Habib Bourguiba Avenue where most rallies take place.

Hundreds of opposition supporters in Tunisia have defied an official ban on their protest against the president after some of their leaders were arrested, breaking through a police barrier in central Tunis to rally on the city's main street.

Before the protesters broke through the barrier on Sunday, police warned them by loudspeaker that their demonstration was illegal but added that they would not stop them by force.

Up to a thousand protesters then pushed a way through the cordon to reach Habib Bourguiba Avenue where most rallies take place.

The National Salvation Front coalition combines Tunisia's biggest party, the Ennahda, the Stop the Coup protest movement and some other political parties, demanding that President Kais Saied step down.

Sunday's protest is being watched to see how far the National Salvation Front and its constituent parts can mobilise supporters in public after the arrests, and how much force the police are willing to use against them.

READ MORE: "Frightened Africans flee Tunisia after president's anti-migrant tirade"

Opposition to Saied

In recent weeks, several of the front's top leaders have been detained as part of a crackdown on prominent critics of Saied and charged with conspiring against state security. 

This week, the Tunis governor refused permission for Sunday's protest.

The front accuses Saied of a coup for suddenly seizing broad powers in 2021, shutting down the elected parliament and moving to rule by decree before writing a new constitution that he passed in a referendum with a low turnout last year.

Saied says his actions were legal and necessary to save Tunisia from chaos, and has called his enemies criminals, traitors and terrorists, urging the authorities to take action against them.

The recent arrests also targeted the head of Tunisia's main independent media outlet, two judges, a labour union official and a prominent businessman, showing police were ready to target critics of Saied from across the political spectrum.

However, opposition to Saied is fragmented along ideological and political lines that were drawn during the period of democratic government after the 2011 revolution which triggered the Arab spring.

On Saturday, the powerful UGTT labour union and allied parties staged their own protest, bringing many thousands of supporters onto the streets against Saied in what appeared to be the biggest demonstration against him so far.

READ MORE:  "Tunisian opposition leader arrested in government crackdown"

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