Human rights in Tunisia are a growing cause for concern.
On Tuesday, courts upheld the sentencing of two prominent Tunisian journalists accused of financial crimes.
But media rights groups say the ruling was a case of “judicial harassment”, and argued that the charges levelled lacked evidence.
Prior to the hearing, Amnesty International sounded the alarm, accusing Tunisian authorities of intensifying their pressure on non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and using legal means to disband such groups.
NGOs that advocate for human rights, migrant protection, election monitoring and against corruption are most affected.
READ | Tunisia rights groups denounce closure of freedom of information agency
“Dozens of NGOs run the risk of being dissolved, while others are being prosecuted,” Safia Rayan of Amnesty International told DW.
Rayan added:
The crackdown on civil society and independent media outlets is intensifying and threatening their existence.
Last week, the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, called on Tunisia to end its repression of opposition members and civil society groups.
Speaking in Geneva, Türk said human rights activists were being criminalised.
The fate of 84-year-old Rached Ghannouchi, the chair of the moderate Islamic Ennahda party, has also sparked concern.
He ranks among the country’s most prominent prisoners, and has been handed jail sentences now adding up to around 50 years behind bars, according to Reuters news agency.
Tunisian President Kais Saied, elected to office in 2019, has been consolidating power since 2021.
He’s sidelined Tunisia’s parliament, weakened its judiciary, and has taken action against opposition members and critics.
Democracy, undermined
The Democratic Erosion Consortium, a US organisation specialised in examining democratic structures, describes Saied’s style of government as “stealth authoritarianism”, whereby democratic institutions are undermined gradually.
All that remains, according to the group, is a “facade of a democracy”.
Tunisian authorities have been cracking down on dissidents for some time now.
In April 2025, a Tunis court sentenced 37 opposition members and human rights defenders to prison terms of between four and 66 years.
#Tunisia has eliminated #trachoma - I congratulate the government, health workers and communities in 🇹🇳 on this historic public health achievement. Eliminating trachoma shows what long-term political commitment, strong primary health care and teamwork can do:… pic.twitter.com/StX9g0Rf9F
— Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) May 14, 2026Amnesty International described the charges as “unfounded”. Yet in November, a court of appeal upheld most verdicts.
In the past year, there have also been “positive examples where sustained collective mobilisation led to the release of arbitrarily detained persons”, Amnesty International’s Safia Rayan said.
Nevertheless, authorities had continued undermining human rights and the rule of law, Rayan added.
“The level of repression has now reached a degree where the state not only suppresses criticism of human rights violations, but even persecutes those who criticise this suppression itself,” according to Maria Josua of the German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA).
She pointed to the case of journalist Zied El Heni, who was sentenced to one year in prison in early May after he criticised Tunisia’s justice system.

Demonstrators hold up a large banner featuring a portrait of Tunisian President Kais Saied during a demonstration that brings together thousands of supporters of the president organised in Tunis, Tunisia.
Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto via Getty Images
The Tunisian court in question justified its tough ruling by arguing that El Heni had “harmed others”.
But GIGA analyst Josua told DW that “legal instruments are increasingly being used to silence opposition and critical voices”.
President denies accusations
President Kais Saied, meanwhile, rejects accusations that he is steering the country into authoritarianism, recently telling news agencies he did not intend to become a dictator.
He added that while civil liberties were guaranteed, no one stands above the law.

Tunisian President Kais Saied speaks at the opening ceremony of the 10th ministerial meeting of the China-Arab States Cooperation Forum.
Tingshu Wang-Pool/Getty Images
The Tunisian daily La Presse, which is thought to be affiliated with the government, expressed a similar view in early April.
It said that while civil society organisations had played an important role in Tunisia’s democratic transition, they should stop receiving foreign funding.
Meanwhile, press freedom in Tunisia has also deteriorated drastically.
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) now ranks Tunisia 137th out of 180 countries when it comes to journalistic freedom, just one place above crisis-ridden Libya.
This is all the more worrying as Tunisia was once praised as a democratic role model.
“Since President Kais Saied’s coup in July 2021, press freedom has been in steep decline,” RSF warned.
Coordinated suppression?
The dynamics unfolding within the Tunisian state must be carefully examined, said Manuel Gath, who heads the Friedrich Ebert Foundation’s (FES) Tunis office.
“I have my doubts that every investigation into, or suspension of an NGO is actually as strategic and targeted as it might appear from the outside,” Gath told DW.

Protesters display a large banner in Arabic reading, ‘Tunisia: closed borders, open prisons’, during a march organised by the Campaign Against the Criminalisation of Civil Work in Tunis, Tunisia.
Chedly Ben Ibrahim/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Sometimes, he added, such acts are merely the product of arbitrary or hasty state action.
Migrants from sub-Saharan Africa and refugee organisations are also coming under increasing pressure.
Five members of the Tunisian Council for Refugees organisation are currently on trial, accused of supporting illegal migration, even though they cooperated with the UN refugee agency UNHCR.
Human Rights Watch says civil society work is increasingly criminalised.
Manuel Gath explained that Tunisian authorities often instrumentalise financial or administrative issues to take action against civil society groups.
“As soon as something doesn’t specifically meet the norm, a suspension is issued.”
Former Saied supporters are not spared state repression, either.
Lawmaker Ahmed Saidani was sentenced to eight months in prison earlier this year after mocking Saied in a satirical Facebook post.
“This shows how low the regime’s tolerance threshold has become,” Maria Josua pointed out, “when even satire and minor forms of public criticism are criminalised”.
Why is Saied still popular at home?
Observers argue that the country’s economic challenges are actually a contributing factor to why Saied continues to enjoy domestic support.
The Atlantic Council, a US think tank, says that Tunisia has faced unemployment, inflation and economic stagnation since the 2011 revolution.
Amid this instability, Saied is still perceived as more favourable than Tunisia’s divided political elite.
While the economic situation has not noticeably improved since his coup, “it hasn’t got dramatically worse either,” according to Gath.
At the same time, however, the debt ratio continues to rise, and the Tunisian economy is coming under increasing pressure.
The government is simply “buying time” by going after civil society, Gath argued.
This, he said, was dangerous given the country’s growing debt and inflation.
Moreover, solving “growth and employment issues are being postponed and becoming more costly to fix as time passes.”
GIGA expert Maria Josua agreed.
She told DW: “Saied taking such massive action against any form of criticism is indicative of the weakness of his authoritarian system.”
She added: “He is obviously no longer able to mobilise support through political ideas or economic success.”
She added that she believes EU countries have a role to play: “Despite migration-related interests, European countries should continue to insist Tunisia honour democratic principles, the rule of law and human rights.”










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