opponent Sihem Bensedrine banned from leaving the country

Tunisian opponent Sihem Bensedrine announced on Tuesday (March 7) that she was banned from leaving the country after being charged as part of an investigation into a report written by a body she chaired on crimes committed under the dictatorship.

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Created in 2014 in the wake of the revolt that ended the dictatorship in 2011, the Truth and Dignity Commission (IVD) was responsible for listing the violations committed by state representatives between 1955 and 2013, a period that covers the presidency of Habib Bourguiba (1957-1987), of his successor Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali (1987-2011), but also the post-revolutionary troubles.

At the end of its mandate, in 2018, the IVD had drafted a voluminous report which was published in the Official newspaper in 2020. In it, the body, which interviewed nearly 50,000 alleged victims and sent 173 cases to justice, had called for “dismantle a system of corruption, repression and dictatorship” persisting within state institutions.

Twenty personalities arrested

In a press release sent to AFP, Mr.me Bensedrine says he has been the subject of a judicial investigation since February 2021 for suspicions of falsification of this report. She is suspected of having received a bribe to add a paragraph accusing the Banque Franco-Tunisienne (BFT) of corruption, which she denies.

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Mme Bensedrine was banned from leaving the territory after being summoned Thursday by an investigating judge at the financial and economic judicial center, who notified him of his indictment for “to have procured unjustified advantages”to get “caused harm to the state” and for “falsification”, and this on a request from the prosecution dated February 20, she said in the press release. She was surprised that the measures targeting her were announced on February 17 by a columnist “reputed to be close to the Minister of Justice”. No comment on this case could be obtained from judicial sources.

About twenty personalities in political, media and business circles have been arrested in Tunisia since the beginning of February. President Kais Saied, who assumed full powers in July 2021, described those arrested as “terrorists” and claimed that they were involved in a “conspiracy against state security”.

The World with AFP

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