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eleven years after the death of opponent Chokri Belaïd, four people were sentenced to death

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During a demonstration in September 2015 in Tunis, a man holds a sign in tribute to Chokri Belaïd and Mohamed Brahmi, assassinated in 2013. RIADH DRIDI / AP

Eleven years after the death of Tunisian left-wing opponent Chokri Belaïd in 2013, four men were convicted for his assassination, Aymen Chtiba, deputy prosecutor general of the anti-terrorism judicial unit, announced on national television on Wednesday March 27. After eleven years of investigations and legal proceedings and fifteen hours of deliberation, the court of first instance of Tunis also sentenced two defendants to life imprisonment, Mr. Chtiba said. The latter was pleased that “justice has been done” explaining the length of the deliberations by “nature and volume” folder.

Sentences of two to one hundred and twenty years’ imprisonment were also handed down for other defendants, while five individuals were acquitted even though they remain accused in other cases. Although the Tunisian justice system continues to regularly hand down death sentences, particularly in terrorism cases, a de facto moratorium has been applied since 1991.

In total, 23 people were charged with the assassination in his car and in front of his home, on February 6, 2013, of Chokri Belaïd, a 48-year-old lawyer and virulent critic of the Islamo-conservative party Ennahda (“Renaissance”), time in power in Tunisia.

Assassination claimed by jihadists linked to ISIS

Jihadists allied with the Islamic State (IS) group claimed responsibility for the assassination of Mr. Belaïd as well as that, six months later, of MP Mohamed Brahmi, 58, another figure in the left-wing opposition.

The Tunisian authorities announced in February 2014 the death of Kamel Gadhgadhi, considered the main author of the assassination of Mr. Belaïd, during an anti-terrorist operation.

MM. Belaïd and Brahmi opposed the policies of Ennahda, a movement which dominated Parliament and the government for ten years after the “jasmine revolution” in 2011, until the coup of the current president, Kaïs Saïed , on July 25, 2021, by which he granted himself full powers. These two assassinations marked Tunisia and constituted a turning point for the country, cradle of the “Arab Spring”, then in the midst of a democratic transition, by causing a deep political crisis.

Read also (2023): Article reserved for our subscribers In Tunisia, Ennahda’s slow descent into hell

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In June 2022, Kaïs Saïed, who carried out the assassination of the two “martyrs” a national cause, had ordered the dismissal of dozens of magistrates, some of whom are suspected, according to him, of having obstructed the investigation. The families and defense of the two killed opponents have regularly accused political parties and certain judges over the last decade of obstructing the search for the truth to protect the guilty.

Those close to Chokri Belaïd regularly accused the Ennahda party of having at least shown “indulgent” towards the discourse of extremist Islamists which had developed at the time. Wednesday morning, the movement promptly reacted to this first verdict, believing that the police and judicial investigations as well as the convictions handed down “prove innocence” of Ennahda. The party denounced “a desire of certain ideological currents and political parties to wrongly accuse him” of these assassinations.

The World with AFP

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