Tunisia using more ‘arbitrary detentions’ to stifle dissent: HRW

Tunisia using more ‘arbitrary detentions’ to stifle dissent: HRW
Activists and members of human rights groups protest in Tunis, Tunisia on March 4, 2025. (Reuters file photo)
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Updated 16 April 2025

Tunisia using more ‘arbitrary detentions’ to stifle dissent: HRW

Tunisia using more ‘arbitrary detentions’ to stifle dissent: HRW
  • North African country has seen an ‘increased reliance on arbitrary detention and politically motivated prosecutions to intimidate, punish and silence its critics’

TUNIS: Tunisian authorities have used arbitrary detention as a key tool of repression, jailing dozens of critics on politically motivated charges in a sweeping crackdown on dissent, Human Rights Watch said Wednesday.
In a new report, HRW said the North African country has seen an “increased reliance on arbitrary detention and politically motivated prosecutions to intimidate, punish and silence its critics.”
The organization said several critics have been “detained on abusive charges, including terrorism” over political activities and public statements.
“Over 50 people were being held on political grounds or for exercising their rights as of January 2025,” it said.
“At least 14 detainees could face capital punishment if convicted,” it added.
This comes amid an ongoing trial in Tunisia involving around 40 high-profile defendants, some outspoken critics of President Kais Saied, facing charges including plotting against the state.
Several were arrested in February 2023, after which Saied labelled them “terrorists.”
Elected in 2019 after Tunisia emerged as the Arab Spring’s sole democratic success, the president staged a sweeping power grab in 2021.
Since then, rights groups have warned of a rollback of freedoms.
“Not since the 2011 revolution have Tunisian authorities unleashed such repression,” said Bassam Khawaja, HRW’s deputy Middle East and North Africa director.
“President Saied’s government has returned the country to an era of political prisoners,” he added.
The United Nations recently urged Tunisian authorities to bring “an end to the pattern of arrests, arbitrary detentions and imprisonment of dozens of human rights defenders, lawyers, journalists, activists and politicians.”


Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide

Updated 4 sec ago

Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide

Italy PM Meloni says been denounced to ICC for complicity in genocide
Meloni said Defense Minister Guido Crosetto and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani had been denounced

ROME: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said on Tuesday that she and two of her ministers had been reported to the International Criminal Court for alleged complicity in genocide in connection with Israel’s offensive in Gaza.
Speaking in an interview with state television company RAI, Meloni said Defense Minister Guido Crosetto and Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani had been denounced, and “I think” also Roberto Cingolani, the head of defense group Leonardo In other remarks, Meloni said she believed that US President Donald Trump had come to the conclusion that Russia was not interested in a peace deal with Ukraine.

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity
Updated 59 min 17 sec ago

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity

Italian lawmaker wanted by Hungary clings to EU immunity
  • The European Parliament in Strasbourg backed the anti-fascist activist by 306 votes to 305 in a secret ballot
  • Salis was arrested with other activists in Budapest in February 2023

STRASBOURG: EU lawmakers on Tuesday narrowly rejected Hungary’s request to strip left-wing Italian lawmaker Ilaria Salis of her parliamentary immunity for alleged violence at a neo-Nazi rally in Budapest.
The European Parliament in Strasbourg backed the anti-fascist activist — who has become a high-profile foe of Hungary’s nationalist government — by 306 votes to 305 in a secret ballot.
“This vote is a victory for democracy, rule of law, and antifascism,” Salis said in a statement.
Salis, 41, was arrested with other activists in Budapest in February 2023 while taking part in a protest against an annual commemoration by neo-Nazis.
She was released from detention after more than a year, following her election to the EU parliament with a small leftist party in 2024.
Hungarian prosecutors requested an 11-year prison sentence and the case made international headlines when Salis appeared in a Budapest court with her feet shackled.
Salis has requested to be tried in Italy.


Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic
Updated 07 October 2025

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic

Tanzania police investigating reported abduction of government critic
  • Humphrey Polepole went missing from his home in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam early on Monday
  • David Misime, a police spokesperson, said the force was investigating reports of Polepole’s abduction

NAIROBI: Tanzania’s police force said it was investigating reports that a former ambassador turned government critic had been kidnapped after his family said he was forcefully taken from his house.
Several critics of the government of President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who will stand for re-election on October 29, have disappeared since last year, with opposition parties alleging a campaign of abductions.
Humphrey Polepole, who resigned as ambassador to Cuba in July and has repeatedly and harshly criticized Tanzania’s ruling party in the months since, went missing from his home in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam early on Monday, his brother, Godfrey Polepole, told Reuters.
“The main door entering the house was broken and the door to the bedroom was broken as well,” he said. “There was a lot of blood from the sitting room all the way to the bedroom and the bloodstains continued even outside toward the gate area.”
Hassan, who won plaudits after coming to power in 2021 for easing repression of political opponents that was rampant under her predecessor, ordered an investigation last year into reports of abductions, but no official findings have been made public.
Government spokesperson Gerson Msigwa did not immediately respond to a phone call or text message seeking comment.
In a statement on September 29, the government rejected allegations by Human Rights Watch that it was cracking down on its critics ahead of the election and called accounts of abductions “a major source of concern for the government.”
David Misime, a police spokesperson, said the force was investigating reports of Polepole’s abduction.
“The Police Force has seen the reports being circulated on social media by his relatives that he has been kidnapped. We have already begun working ... to ascertain the truth,” he said in a statement late on Monday.
After resigning as ambassador, Polepole launched a series of broadsides during online press briefings against the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), accusing it of flouting party rules by choosing Hassan as its presidential candidate, engaging in corruption and abducting government critics.
Hassan’s government has also faced human rights scrutiny over the arrest in April of Tanzania’s main opposition leader, Tundu Lissu. Lissu went on trial on Monday for treason over what prosecutors said was a speech calling on the public to rebel. He has pleaded not guilty and said the charges are politically motivated.


Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses
Updated 07 October 2025

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses

Four missing after Madrid building partly collapses
  • The three men and one woman were reported missing by the construction company
  • Police and firefighters were using drones and sniffer dogs to search for the missing

MADRID: At least four construction workers were missing after a building under renovation partly collapsed in central Madrid, authorities said on Tuesday.
The three men and one woman were reported missing by the construction company in charge, Madrid’s Deputy Mayor Inma Sanz told reporters.
“The upper floors collapsed and fell downwards, therefore we’re talking about a very significant amount of rubble that will take a long time to clear — not just hours, but probably several days,” Sanz said.


Police and firefighters were using drones and sniffer dogs to search for the missing inside the building located near the Spanish capital’s opera house and the royal palace.
Two people were lightly injured while a third person was taken to hospital with a broken leg, said Beatriz Martin, an emergency services spokesperson.
The partial collapse of the five-story building occurred inside, leaving its facade intact, Martin added.
Construction worker Mikhail was pumping concrete into the building’s lower floors and was outside when the collapse occurred. He said he saw a large cloud of dust and immediately sprinted away.
“I was the first to run, I didn’t care about anything else. I’ll save my life first and, if I can, save others later,” he told reporters.
The building was being converted into a hotel by developer Rehbilita, according to information on its website. Rehbilita did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source

Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source
Updated 07 October 2025

Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source

Mayor in western Germany in critical condition after stabbing, says source
  • The case raises memories of the 2019 murder of conservative local government president Walter Luebcke

DUESSELDORF: A freshly elected mayor was found injured in western Germany with multiple stab wounds and her life is in danger, a security source told Reuters on Tuesday.
Bild newspaper reported that Iris Stalzer, a Social Democrat who was due to take office after being elected mayor of Herdecke in the Ruhr region a week ago, had been found by her son.
The case raises memories of the 2019 murder of conservative local government president Walter Luebcke, a support of then Chancellor Angela Merkel’s refugee policy, who was shot dead by a far-right activist as he smoked a late-night cigarette on his terrace at home.
Local and regional authorities were not immediately available to comment.