Fears for Tunisian democracy as president holds referendum on new constitution

Critics of Kais Saied claim move could hand him almost total power

Tunisian president Kais Saied and his wife Ichraf Chebil leave after voting in a referendum on a draft constitution he put forward, at a polling station in the capital Tunis. Photograph: Wassim Jdidi/AFP via Getty Images
Tunisian president Kais Saied and his wife Ichraf Chebil leave after voting in a referendum on a draft constitution he put forward, at a polling station in the capital Tunis. Photograph: Wassim Jdidi/AFP via Getty Images

Tunisians on Monday were expected to approve giving the president unfettered powers in a referendum on a new constitution that critics fear will dismantle the democracy that emerged from a 2011 revolution.

The vote was held on the first anniversary of Kais Saied’s ousting of an elected parliament, when he established emergency rule and began governing by fiat.

Tunisia's divided opposition parties have called his moves a coup that risks flinging Tunisia back into the autocratic era from before the revolution and putting the final nail into the coffin of the 2011 "Arab Spring" uprisings.

But amid an economic crisis and deepening hardship, there has been little in the way of protest against Mr Saied, whose power grab last year was welcomed by many Tunisians who were fed up with political bickering and government failure.

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It was not clear on Monday evening when the results of the referedum would be announced but with little apparent enthusiasm for the vote and a boycott by major parties, analysts expect a “yes” vote with a low turnout.

As voting got under way, few people were out in the humid early morning streets. But at Rue Marseilles polling station in downtown Tunis, Illyes Moujahed was first in line, saying Mr Saied was the only hope.

"I'm here to save Tunisia from collapse. To save it from years of corruption and failure," he said.

Standing outside a cafe in the capital, Samir Slimane said he was not interested in voting. "I have no hope of change. Kais Saied will not change anything. He only seeks to have all the powers," he said.

Under rules set by Mr Saied, no minimum level of participation among the 9.2 million registered voters is needed to approve the constitution. He has only stipulated that the constitution will come into effect once the final results are published, and has not said what happens if voters reject it.

Mr Saied has hailed his changes as the foundation of a new republic to put the revolution back on course and end years of political sclerosis and economic stagnation.

“We will establish a new republic, not like the one of the past 10 black years ... We want a state of law. The people will have the last word,” Mr Saied said after voting.

Elected in 2019, Mr Saied has said freedoms will be protected.

The new constitution shifts power back to the presidency and away from parliament, where an Islamist party, Ennahda, has been the biggest faction since the revolution.

Western states which held up Tunisia as an Arab Spring success story have said little about the proposed changes, though Washington criticised Mr Saied in June for undermining democratic institutions after he purged the judiciary.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates showed some support to Mr Saied last year, happy to see the Islamists’ wings clipped. But they have not followed through with badly-needed aid despite Tunisian officials saying some had been pledged.

Groups that oppose Mr Saied have held scattered, small protests in the run-up to the referendum, underlining their disunity.

Ennahda took part in a protest on Saturday, while civil society organisations and smaller parties held one on Friday. A party that backed the pre-revolution autocracy held its own on both days. — Reuters