Tunisia parliament approves new anti-terror law
Tunisia's parliament on July 25 voted to approve a new anti-terror law despite strong criticism from NGOs and human rights groups. The law, which replaces 2003 legislation passed under the dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, was adopted following a June attack in Sousse and a March attack on Tunisia's national museum, both claimed by the Islamic State. The adoption of the law came after three days of parliamentary debate and a vote of 174-0 with 10 abstentions. Though the law has been hailed by some as a great step towards making the country safer, Human Rights Watch claims that it will "open the way to prosecuting political dissent as terrorism, give judges overly broad powers and curtail lawyers' ability to provide an effective defense." Part of the concern for the bill, advocacy groups say, comes from the law's vague definition of terrorist crimes and its failure to provide enough protection for the rights of defendants. Leftist opposition members also contend that the law does not distinguish between acts of terror and protests.
From Jurist, July 25. Used with permission.
Recent Updates
21 hours 12 min ago
1 day 32 min ago
1 day 17 hours ago
1 day 17 hours ago
1 day 17 hours ago
2 days 19 hours ago
5 days 21 hours ago
5 days 21 hours ago
1 week 20 hours ago
1 week 20 hours ago