The ITUC has expressed serious concern over acts of anti-union repression by the authorities under the control of
Tunisian President Kais Saied.
The country has faced a growing crisis since Saied dismissed Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi and seized absolute power
last year, with growing poverty and unemployment along with mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic. Since 25 July, Saeid
has banned parliament from sitting and assumed legislative power himself.
On 13 January, public television workers striking against the refusal of the authorities to renew their collective
agreement were surrounded by a large police squadron and subjected to interrogation. Some of the workers were then
forced to broadcast programmes in an attempt to break the strike.
The next day, the tenth anniversary of the revolution that deposed the dictator Ben Ali, tens of thousands of
demonstrators marching in protest against the government were met with violence meted out by thousands of police,
including tear gas, water cannon and physical beatings. Several were brutally arrested, and some remain in detention
facing charges.
Sharan Burrow, ITUC general secretary, said: “The hope that sprang from Tunisia’s revolution is being dashed by the
autocratic behaviour of the president. Having refused repeated requests from the trade union centre UGTT to work
together on the problems facing the country, he has resorted to violent repression. The UGTT played a vital role in the
revolution and has continued to do so ever since. The ITUC stands with the UGTT and its members and will do all we can
to support them, to stop the repression and to ensure that the country does not simply bend to the diktats of the IMF,
which would only increase poverty and unemployment.”