Tunisian Party: The right to access information related to the activities of the president is absent

Tunisian Party: The right to access information related to the activities of the president is absent

News from Al-Madinah: The head of the Free Constitutional Party in Tunisia, Abeer Moussa, said on Saturday that there is “an absence of the right to access (access) to the information related to the activities of the country’s president Qais Saeed, and everything that happens in the presidential palace.

“This was spoken to Mossi during a protest by hundreds of her party’s followers in front of the Independent High Commission for Audiovisual Communication (Hacika), in the capital city of Tunis, although the Tunisian authorities made no immediate remark on it until later (13. 20 GMT).
The slogans on the banners that the demonstrators held up read, “The people have no awareness of the subject of negotiations with the IMF,” and “media was split between the arms.

“The Haika scandal is the presence of a person in the Carthage Palace (the President) who receives a salary from the fatigue of the Tunisian people who formulate a constitution, appoint, dismiss, hold elections, and set a council, and we have no right to information about what is happening within the presidency,” Moussa said.

“As she made reference to the president of the nation, she continued: “All the pawns that move on the Tunisian scene, whether media, economically, socially, or politically, are led by one engineer and one agenda.”
The necessity of obtaining “national sovereignty and media sovereignty” was emphasised by her.
Moussa thought about that “Access to knowledge about everything happening in the nation is the primary tenet of the media system.

She emphasised “the necessity for Haika to preserve the right to information access and the fair representation of the various political parties.
And “Hika” is a body that modifies, organises, and ensures the variety, diversity, balance, independence, and means of the audiovisual media sector in addition to its work to uphold freedom of expression while adhering to legal restraints. based on its webpage.

Since July 25, 2021, Tunisia has been experiencing a serious political crisis as a result of Sa’id’s imposing extraordinary measures, which have included the ousting of the previous administration and the appointment of a new one, the dissolution of the Judicial Council and Parliament, the issuance of legislation through presidential decrees, the approval of a new constitution through a referendum on July 25 and the holding of early parliamentary elections for December 17. prior to that.
Anatolia.

Tunisian Party: There is no access to information on the president’s activities.

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