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In a statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Tunisia said Blinken's remarks contradict the principles of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
Foreign Minister Othman Jerandi slammed the "unacceptable interference in internal national affairs" and expressed "amazement" at the US officials' criticism, which he said did not "at all reflect the reality of the situation in Tunisia".
A few hours earlier, Jerandi had met with President Kais Saied, who expressed his "rejection of any form of interference in the internal affairs of the country".
This comes after voters in a referendum in the country overwhelmingly backed a new constitution giving Saied nearly total powers.
Blinken had said the new constitution could undermine democracy and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms in Tunisia.
"An inclusive and transparent reform process is crucial going forward to begin to restore the confidence of the millions of Tunisians who either did not participate in the referendum or opposed the new constitution," he said.
American ambassadorial nominee Joey Hood, meanwhile, told the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee in a hearing on Wednesday that Tunisia had recently "experienced an alarming erosion of democratic norms and fundamental freedoms".
The draft constitution will turn the president into an omnipotent figure, without any institutional checks and balances, while also weakening the judiciary and constraining other branches of the state.
It further allows the president to serve two five-year terms, which could be extended in the event of an undefined “imminent danger.”
In recent weeks, the Tunisian people have held huge demonstrations across the country in a public display of opposition to the proposed constitution.
Earlier this year, Saied had said that he would form a committee to rewrite the constitution, put it to a referendum in July, and hold parliamentary elections in December.
Critics say the president has moved the country, which faces a grinding economic crisis, down a dangerous path back toward autocracy.
The so-called referendum, which swiftly raised an outcry among elites, is the latest move in what Saied’s opponents brand as a march to one-man rule.
In July last year and after violent rallies against the government demanding the improvement of basic services, Saied suspended the parliament, known as the Assembly of Representatives, for a month and relieved the prime minister of his duties, waived the immunity of lawmakers, and ordered the military to close the parliament house.
The president later extended the suspension of the parliament until a new election takes place. In September, he announced that he would rule by decree, ignoring parts of the constitution. In February this year, he also dissolved the Supreme Judicial Council, a top independent judicial watchdog.
Source: Press TV
#Tunisia About 2 years
This page is the English version of Almasirah Media Network website and it focuses on delivering all leading News and developments in Yemen, the Middle East and the world. In the eara of misinformation imposed by the main stream media in the Middle East and abroad, Almasirah Media Network strives towards promoting knowledge, principle values and justice, among all societies and cultures in the world
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