Tunisia: Ex-president Moncef Marzouki Sentenced in Absentia to Eight Years in Prison

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The first post-revolution president, he was found guilty at first instance of trying to “change the form of government”, of “inciting people to arm themselves against each other” and of “provoking disorder and looting” in the country.

Former Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki, a virulent critic of the current head of state Kaïs Saïed, was sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison for attempting to “provoke disorder” in the country, reports said on Friday evening. February 23 from local media. This verdict was pronounced by the criminal chamber of the Court of First Instance of Tunis, according to these sources.

Living in France, Mr. Marzouki, the first democratically elected president in Tunisia after the 2011 Revolution, was prosecuted in this case after statements published on social networks. He was found guilty at first instance of trying to “change the form of government” , “inciting people to arm themselves against each other” and “provoking disorder and looting” in the country. , indicated the private radio station Mosaïque FM, citing a judicial source. Contacted by Agence France-Presse, the spokesperson for the Tunis public prosecutor’s office could not be reached.

At the end of 2021, Mr. Marzouki had already been sentenced to four years in prison for “endangering state security abroad” after having, during a demonstration in Paris, called on the French government to “reject all support » to President Saïed, whom he had accused of having “plotted against the Revolution”.

An “enemy of Tunisia” for President Saïed

Since November 2021, he has also been the subject of an international arrest warrant issued by a Tunisian judge shortly after Mr. Saied asked to investigate various comments made by Mr. Marzouki, described as an “enemy of Tunisia”, and to withdraw his diplomatic passport.

After President Saïed’s coup in July 2021 by which he granted himself all powers, Mr. Marzouki increased his interventions on television channels and social networks to call for the dismissal of a man he described as a “putschist” and “dictator”.

The historical opponent of the dictatorship of Ben Ali then first president of the post-revolution (2011-2014), Moncef Marzouki, 78 years old, has long symbolized the fight for democracy in Tunisia, even if his image has been blurred due to notably his controversial alliance with the Islamo-conservative party Ennahdha, thanks to which he won the presidential election, according to analysts.