Google – AFP, Antoine
Lambroschini (AFP), 1 July 2013
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Tunisian
deputies interrupt the reading of the draft constitution on
July 1, 2013 in
Tunis (AFP, Fethi Belaid)
|
TUNIS —
Chaotic scenes marred Tunisia's first parliamentary debate on a new post-Arab
Spring constitution on Monday, as tensions flared between the ruling Islamists
and their opponents over the long-delayed draft.
The North
African country's political stability remains fragile, two and a half years
after the revolution that ousted veteran strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali,
adding urgency to the need for the new charter.
But the
debate was suspended after less than 30 minutes when the presentation by the
head of the drafting committee, Islamist MP Habib Kheder, was interrupted by
opposition MPs who accuse him of introducing controversial articles in a
discretionary manner.
Those
articles exempt laws adopted under ruling Islamist party Ennahda from
constitutional control for three years, and extend indefinitely the legislative
powers of the assembly while failing to draw up a timetable for elections to
replace it with a new parliament.
![]() |
Tunisians
shout slogans against the
ruling Ennahda Party in front of the
Constituent
Assembly on July 1, 2013
in Tunis (AFP, Fethi Belaid)
|
Before the
session was interrupted, a handful of secular opposition MPs issued a statement
criticising the "fraudulent process that has affected the workings of the
constituent committees."
The
assembly's deputy speaker, Islamist MP Meherzia Laabidi, strongly criticised
the disruption to the debate.
"The
men of Tunisia remained seated... These were dwarfs who stood up, she told
private radio Mosaique FM, condemning the "immaturity in the ranks of the
opposition."
Several
hundred people also protested against the draft constitution outside the National
Assembly, which has been repeatedly criticised for its inefficiency and the
non-attendance of members.
Beyond the
controversial clauses introduced, some civil society and opposition activists
have raised concerns that the text does not sufficiently guarantee basic
liberties.
Amnesty
International said it undermined the principles of international human rights
law by giving greater legal value to the constitution than to international
treaties ratified by Tunis.
But a
relatively wide consensus appears to have been forged on the division of
executive powers between the president and the prime minister, which was at the
centre of a major political tussle.
Ennahda had
previously insisted on a pure parliamentary system before allowing the head of
state to retain important powers, notably in the areas of defence and
diplomacy. The Islamists also agreed to abandon having the Koran inscribed as a
source of law.
Assembly
speaker Mustapha Ben Jaafar, who heads Ennahda's secular ally Ettakatol, sought
to highlight the strengths of the draft text.
"We
wanted to build a constitution on solid bases, guaranteeing freedoms, human
rights and the rights of women," adding that it did "not represent
one specific party... but is a constitution for all Tunisians".
The text must
be approved by a two-thirds majority in parliament or be put to a referendum.
The main
political parties were originally given a year to draft the text after the
first post-revolution elections in October 2011, but the timetable was
repeatedly revised amid disagreement about the nature of Tunisia's future
political system.
The new
constitution must be adopted before a timetable can be drawn up for fresh
elections which Prime Minister Ali Larayedh has promised to hold before the end
of 2013.
Adopting
the new constitution is seen as key to restoring stability in Tunisia and
helping overcome the political crises, social unrest and violent attacks by
radical Islamist groups that have rocked the country since the revolution.
"We
must work together to put an end to this transitional phase by organising
elections as soon as possible," Ben Jaafar told parliament on Monday.


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