From Wa'el Alzayat, Emgage Action CEO <[email protected]>
Subject Tunisia's democracy is under threat, but you can still help!
Date July 8, 2022 7:10 PM
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Dear John,
Tunisia, where the Arab Spring began in 2011, is currently under major political upheaval with Tunisian President Kais Sied invoking emergency powers, firing the prime minister, and suspending parliament. Kais' 23-article Presidential Decree [[link removed]] , known also as Decision 117, has suspended the Constitution and granted him extraordinary powers [[link removed]] . The new constitution has removed the oversight structures needed to hold authorities accountable, by limiting the safeguards and independence of the judiciary, and granted the President unchecked "emergency" powers that may undermine many institutional guarantees for human rights. In a country that has long fought to adopt democratic procedures, this move seems to be the beginning of a drawn-out coup by the Tunisian President Kais Sied.
The president has now moved to assume more power and unleashed a deep crackdown on those who dissent with the help of the military. To defend democracy in Tunisia, t here is currently an Amendment [[link removed]] to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would set conditions on U.S. military cooperation with the Tunisian military and security services.
Urge your elected officials to co-sponsor this important amendment [[link removed]]
[[link removed]] This provision does not seek to undermine U.S.-Tunisian security cooperation. Rather, it aims to ensure that the Tunisian security services and U.S. security assistance do not remain complicit in Kais Saied’s constitutional coup—a year-long deconstruction of Tunisia’s hard-fought democracy. This provision would limit U.S. aid to the Tunisian military and police subject to clear democratic conditions, such as ending the use of military courts to prosecute peaceful activists, ending the blockade of parliament by the Tunisian Army, and ensuring police are not interfering with free speech & assembly.
Tunisians demonstrating in Tunis on June 18, 2022, against new constitution called by President Kais Saied. (Jihed Abidellaoui/Reuters/The Washington Post) Urge Congress to act now [[link removed]]
At a time when the U.S. is taking the wrong steps toward supporting democratic values in the Arab world, this amendment provides a rare but important opportunity to counter this trend. So, please take the next two minutes to urge your elected officials to co-sponsor this important amendment.
Sincerely,
Wa'el Alzayat
Emgage Action CEO
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