Report on Human Rights
Practices for 1997Tunisia
Tunisia is a republic dominated by a single political party.
President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali and his Constitutional Democratic
Rally (RCD) continue to control the Government, including the
legislature. The President appoints the Prime Minister, the Cabinet,
and 23 governors. Four opposition parties hold 19 of the 163
seats in Parliament. The executive branch and the President strongly
influence the judiciary.
The police share responsibility for internal security with
a paramilitary national guard. The police operate in the capital
and a few other cities. In outlying areas, their policing duties
are shared with, or ceded to, the national guard. Both forces
are under the control of the Minister of Interior and the President.
The security forces continued to be responsible for serious human
rights abuses.
Tunisia has made substantial progress towards establishing
an export-oriented market economy based on manufactured exports,
tourism, agriculture, and petroleum. The per capita gross national
product for 1997 was approximately $2,000 while real per capita
income grew by 6.9 percent. Sixty percent of citizens are in
the middle class and enjoy a comfortable standard of living.
Tunisia has a high level of literacy, low population growth rates,
and wide distribution of health care.
The Government's human rights performance improved in some
important areas, but it continued to commit some serious abuses.
The ability of citizens to change their government has yet to
be demonstrated. Members of the security forces reportedly physically
abused prisoners and detainees; there was only one publicly reported
case, which the Government denied. Security forces also monitored
the activities of government critics and at times harassed them,
their relatives, and associates. Prison conditions reportedly
ranged from Spartan to poor. The judiciary is subject to executive
branch control, and due process rights are not always observed.
The Government infringed on citizens' privacy rights. The Government
continued to impose significant restrictions on freedom of expression,
and journalists practice self-censorship. The Government demonstrated
a pattern of intolerance of public criticism, enacting selectively
enforced regulations that further restricted freedom of speech,
the press, assembly, and association. The Government continued
to use control of advertising revenue as a means to discourage
newspapers and magazines from publishing material that it deemed
undesirable. The Government frequently seized editions of foreign
newspapers containing articles it considered objectionable. Towards
the end of the year, the Government tolerated a higher degree
of criticism in parliamentary debates and in the press. The Government
limits partially the religious freedom of members of the Baha'i
faith. The Government returned passports to several prominent
human rights activists and to the families of at least 10 Islamist
activists who live abroad, but continued to restrict the freedom
of movement of other government critics and their family members.
The Government resumed regular contact with the Tunisian Human
Rights League (LTDH) in May, but ended it in August. It continued
to place serious obstacles in the way of the LTDH's effective
operation, subjecting League members and other human rights activists
to reported harassment, interrogation, property loss or damage,
loss of employment, and denial of passports. The Government continued
to demonstrate its strong support for the rights of women and
children, however, legal and societal discrimination against women
continued to exist in certain areas.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person,
Including Freedom From:
a. Political and Other Extrajudicial Killing
Human rights activists alleged that police used unwarranted
lethal force against an elderly woman, Ghezala Hannachi, during
a search of her home in September, when they pushed Hannachi to
the ground, causing her to fall and incur fatal injuries. The
Government maintained that Hannachi (who allegedly had a preexisting
heart condition) suffered a heart attack upon learning that her
son had been implicated in a narcotics investigation. The Government
asserted that the police rushed Hannachi to the hospital and that
she died en route.
Human rights activists alleged that two deaths in custody
occurred as a result of official negligence (see Section 1.c.).
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment
The Penal Code prohibits the use of torture and other cruel,
inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment; however, security
services allegedly have used various methods of torture to coerce
confessions from detainees. The forms of torture allegedly include
electric shock, submersion of the head in water, beatings with
hands, sticks, and police batons, and food and sleep deprivation.
Human rights lawyers alleged that police and prison authorities
reportedly mistreated prisoners by subjecting them to physical
abuse. According to human rights activists, Abdel Moumen Belanes,
a member of the outlawed Tunisian Communist Workers Party, was
beaten severely by prison guards on April 30 and May 12. Credible
sources alleged that, in response to Belanes's vocal criticism
of prison conditions and his refusal to salute prison guards,
up to 12 prison guards stood upon his torso and arms and trod
upon him with heavy boots. His attorneys also alleged that Belanes
was held in solitary confinement and that he was not permitted
to receive visitors for 1 month after the beating. Upon receiving
complaints from the Tunisian Human Rights League about the treatment
that Belanes had received, the Government launched an investigation
of the case and transferred Belanes to another prison with ostensibly
better conditions, but maintained that all allegations of abuse
were unfounded. The Government inquired into 1996 allegations
by a German citizen that he was beaten severely in custody and
concluded that the allegations were unfounded.
Human rights advocates maintain that charges of torture and
mistreatment are difficult to substantiate because government
authorities often deny medical examinations until evidence of
abuse has disappeared. The Government maintained that it investigates
all complaints of torture and mistreatment filed with the prosecutor's
office and noted that alleged victims sometimes publicly accused
authorities of acts of abuse without taking the steps required
to initiate an investigation. Absent a formal complaint, the Government
may open an administrative investigation, but is unlikely to release
the results to the lawyers of affected prisoners.
According to defense attorneys and former prisoners, prison
conditions ranged from Spartan to poor. One credible source alleged
that 40 to 43 prisoners occupied one cell; another alleged that
120 prisoners were confined to a cell designed to hold 50. Recently
released prisoners claimed that they were provided with insufficient
access to water and toilet facilities, creating serious sanitation
problems. Human rights lawyers claimed that prison conditions
for many of their clients did not meet minimum international standards.
There were credible reports that conditions and prisons rules
were more stringent for political prisoners than for the general
prison population and that the authorities limited the quantity
and variety of food that families could bring to supplement prison
fare. One credible report alleged the existence of special cell
blocks and prisons for political prisoners, where they may be
held in solitary confinement for months on end. Since 1996 National
High Commissioner for Human Rights Rachid Driss, whose organization
is government-funded, has made eight unannounced prison inspections.
Although Driss declared that prison living conditions and prisoner
hygiene were "good and improving," details of his inspections
have not been made public.
Human rights activists alleged that official negligence resulted
in two cases of death in custody. Ridha Khemiri died in Bellarijia
prison on July 25, after undertaking a hunger strike of more than
40 days. The LTDH alleged that the Government did not take appropriate
measures to end Khemiri's hunger strike and therefore contributed
to his death. The Government stated that prison authorities attempted
to provide medical care and nourishment for Khemiri on several
occasions but that he categorically refused all treatment. The
Government maintained that prison authorities were in the process
of transferring Khemiri to a hospital when he died of cardiac
arrest brought on by his prolonged hunger strike.
Ahmed Ouafi, a chronic asthmatic, died in custody on September
4, allegedly after suffering from increasingly serious asthma
attacks over a period of 3 weeks. The Human Rights League claimed
that prison authorities' negligence in providing medical treatment
for Ouafi hastened his death from natural causes. The Government
stated that Ouafi was provided with extensive medical treatment
throughout his incarceration and that he died in a hospital.
The Government does not permit international organizations
or independent human rights organizations to inspect or monitor
prison conditions. In September the Tunisian Human Rights League
announced that the Government had agreed to its long-standing
request to conduct prison inspections, however, none were conducted
by year's end.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
The law authorizes the police to make arrests without warrants
in the cases of suspected felons or crimes in progress. The Government
may hold a suspect incommunicado for 10 days following arrest.
Detainees have the right to be informed of the grounds for arrest
before questioning and may request a medical examination. They
do not have a right to legal representation during prearraignment
detention. Attorneys, human rights monitors, and former detainees
maintain that the authorities illegally extend the 10-day limit
by falsifying the date of arrest.
Detainees have a right to be represented by counsel during
arraignment. The Government provides legal representation for
indigents. At arraignment, the examining magistrate may decide
to release the accused or to remand him to pretrial detention.
The law permits the release of accused persons on bail, which
may be paid by a third party. In cases involving crimes for which
the sentence may exceed 5 years, or which involve national security,
pretrial detention may last an initial period of 6 months and
may be extended by court order for two additional 4-month periods.
During this period, the court conducts an investigation, hears
arguments, and accepts evidence and motions of both parties.
A case proceeds from investigation to the Criminal Court
of Appeals, which sets a trial date. There is no legal limit
to the length of time the court may hold a case over for trial
nor is there a legal imperative to a speedy hearing. Complaints
of prolonged detention awaiting trial were common, and President
Ben Ali publicly encouraged judges to make better use of release
on bail and suspended sentences.
Human rights activists alleged that the Government subjected
the family members of Islamist activists to arbitrary arrest,
reportedly utilizing charges of "association with criminal
elements" to punish family members for crimes committed by
individuals (see Section 1.f). Rachida Ben Salem, the wife of
an Islamist activist now living in Holland, was arrested on such
charges while attempting to cross the Libyan border on May 18.
On November 19, she was sentenced to 2 years and 3 months in
prison for association with a "clandestine organization"
and leaving the country illegally (see Section 2.d.). The Government
maintained that Ben Salem was assisted in her flight from the
country by members of the illegal An-Nahda movement and that she
therefore was correctly charged, prosecuted, and convicted.
There is no reliable estimate of the number of political
detainees. The Constitution prohibits exile, and the Government
observes the prohibition.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
Although the Constitution provides for an independent judiciary,
the executive branch and the President strongly influences the
judiciary. In practice, the judicial branch is part of the Ministry
of Justice and the executive branch appoints, assigns, grants
tenure to, and transfers judges. In addition, the President is
head of the Supreme Council of Judges. This situation renders
judges susceptible to pressure in politically sensitive cases.
The court system comprises the regular civil and criminal
courts, including the courts of first instance, the courts of
appeal, and the Court of Cassation, the nation's highest court,
as well as the military tribunals within the Defense Ministry.
The Code of Procedure is patterned after the French legal
system. By law, the accused has the right to be present at trial,
be represented by counsel, question witnesses, and appeal verdicts.
However, in practice, judges do not always observe these rights.
The law permits trial in absentia of fugitives from the law.
Both the accused and the prosecutor may appeal decisions of the
lower courts. Defendants may request a different judge, if they
believe that a judge is not impartial. The Court of Cassation,
which considers arguments on points of law, as opposed to the
facts of a case, is the final arbiter.
Trials in the regular courts of first instance and in the
courts of appeals are open to the public. The presiding judge
or panel of judges dominates a trial, and defense attorneys have
little opportunity to participate substantively. Defense lawyers
contend that the courts often fail to grant them adequate notice
of trial dates or allow them time to prepare their cases. Some
also reported that judges restricted access to evidence and court
records, requiring in some cases, for example, that all attorneys
of record examine the court file on one appointed day, in judges
chambers without copying material documents. They also complained
that the judges sometimes refused to allow them to call witnesses
on their clients' behalf or to question key government witnesses.
Mohamed Moaada and Khemais Chammari, who were both paroled
at the end of 1996, continued to suffer restrictions to their
freedom (see Section 2.a.).
Military tribunals try cases involving military personnel
and civilians accused of national security crimes. A military
tribunal consists of a civilian judge from the Supreme Court and
four military judges. Defendants may appeal the tribunal's verdict
to the Court of Cassation.
There is no reliable information on the number of political
prisoners. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International report
that there may be hundreds of political prisoners, convicted and
imprisoned for membership in the Islamist group An-Nahda and the
Communist Workers Party, for disseminating information of these
banned organizations, and for aiding relatives of convicted members.
f. Arbitrary Interference With Privacy, Family,
Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution provides for the inviolability of the person,
the home, and for the privacy of correspondence, "except
in exceptional cases defined by law." The law requires that
the police have warrants to conduct searches, but police sometimes
ignore the requirement if authorities consider that state security
is at stake or that a crime is in progress. Authorities can invoke
state security interests to justify telephone surveillance. There
were numerous reports of government interception of facsimile
and computer-transmitted communications. The law does not explicitly
authorize these activities, although the Government stated that
the Code of Criminal Procedure implicitly gives investigating
magistrates such authority. Many political activists experience
frequent and sometimes extended interruptions of residential and
business telephone and facsimile services. One activist complained
that his mail and telephone service has been interrupted since
1996.
The security services monitor the activities of political
critics and sometimes harass, follow, question, or otherwise intimidate
their relatives and associates. Human rights activists alleged
that the relatives of Islamist activists who are in jail or living
abroad were subjected to police surveillance and mandatory visits
to police stations to report their contact with their relatives.
One credible source also alleged that the Government attempted
to pressure the wives of Islamist activists living abroad into
divorcing their husbands. The Government maintained that the
Islamists' relatives are members or associates of the outlawed
An-Nahda movement and that they are correctly subjected to legitimate
laws prohibiting membership or association in that organization.
The security services often question citizens seen talking
with foreign visitors or residents, particularly visiting international
human rights monitors and journalists. Police presence is heavy
throughout the country. The Government regularly prohibited the
distribution of some foreign publications (see Section 2.a.).
Traffic officers routinely stop motorists for no apparent reason
to examine their personal identification and vehicular documents.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of thought, expression,
and the press; however, in practice, the Government restricts
freedom of speech and of the press.
In February the Ministry of Education issued a circular requiring
that organizers of all public meetings on university campuses
submit in advance to the Ministry of Interior a list of participants
and copies of all papers to be presented or discussed. In March
the Ministry of Tourism issued a similar circular requiring that
hotel managers submit the details of all planned events, including
the names of all participants, to the Ministry of Interior prior
to the event. The regulations appear to be selectively enforced.
For example, a May conference of the Arab Lawyers Union was permitted
to proceed without adhering to the regulations. Nonetheless,
many citizens complained that the overall effect of the regulations
was to further restrict free speech and discourage individuals
from criticizing the Government (see Section 2.b.).
In April the Government placed former opposition party leader
Mohamed Moaada under house arrest after he released a lengthy
communique criticizing the Government. In the communique, Moaada
alleged that following his release from prison on parole on December
31, 1996, he and fellow opposition leader Khemais Chammari were
subjected to police surveillance of their homes and movements
and prevented from returning to their jobs or obtaining their
passports. Moaada claimed that beginning in March his telephone
service was interrupted and that he was prohibited from receiving
visitors. The Government ended Moaada's house arrest in July
and returned his passport in September. Chammari received his
passport in April and left the country.
In April four members of the Tunisian General Federation
of Labor (UGTT) were arrested and jailed on charges of possession
and distribution of false material prejudicial to the public order
and of defamation of the secretary general of the UGTT. The charges
were filed after the four signed a petition criticizing the UGTT
Secretary General for having too much personal power, mismanaging
union resources, violating internal UGTT rules, exercising authority
dictatorially, and transforming the UGTT into an organization
that only served the interests of its leaders. Although all four
UGTT members were released on bail in May, the case is still under
consideration by the investigating judge. An arrest warrant was
issued for a fifth UGTT member on the same charges in May, but
because that individual is in hiding, he has not faced court proceedings
on the charges.
Human rights activists alleged that a secondary school teacher,
Mohamed Hamzaoui, faced criminal charges in retaliation for critical
statements he made of the Government. Hamzaoui was arrested in
Sfax on August 17 on charges of possession, distribution, and
use of drugs. According to human rights activists, Hamzaoui first
was brought into a police station for questioning on his antigovernment
statements. Upon returning home, he was confronted with evidence
of drugs that police allegedly found in his home in his absence.
Credible sources reported that Hamzaoui was neither a drug trafficker
nor a drug user. On October 10, Hamzaoui was convicted on one
count of drug possession and sentenced to 1 year in prison and
an approximately $910 (1,000 dinar) fine. The Government released
Hamzaoui from prison upon presidential order on October 16.
In September prominent activist and Human Rights League Vice
President Khemais Ksila was arrested on defamation charges after
he circulated a communique announcing his intention to begin a
hunger strike to protest government reprisals for his human rights
activism (see Section 4). In the communique, Ksila also criticized
the Government for restricting freedom of expression. Ksila was
scheduled to be tried on January 21, 1998. The Government maintained
that Ksila was being prosecuted in full accordance with the law.
Although several independent newspapers and magazines and
one private cable television station exist, the Government relies
upon direct and indirect methods to restrict press freedom and
encourage a high degree of self-censorship. Primary among these
methods is "depot legal," the requirement that printers
and publishers provide copies of all publications to the Chief
Prosecutor, Ministry of Interior, and Ministry of Culture prior
to distribution. Similarly, distributors must deposit copies
of publications printed abroad with the Chief Prosecutor and various
ministries prior to their public release. While publishers need
not wait for an authorization, they must obtain a receipt of deposit
before distribution. On occasion such receipts are reportedly
withheld, sometimes indefinitely. Without a receipt, publications
may not be distributed legally. The Press Code stipulates fines
and confiscations for failure to comply with these provisions.
In addition, the Government provides official texts on major
domestic and international events and reportedly has reprimanded
publishers and editors for failing to publish these statements.
The Government also relies upon indirect methods, such as
newsprint subsidies, control of public advertising revenues, and
threatened imposition of restrictions upon journalists to encourage
self-censorship in the media. There were reports that the Government
withheld advertising orders, a vital source of revenues, from
publications that published articles that the Government deemed
offensive. The Government exerted further control over the media
by threatening to impose restrictions on journalists, such as
refusing permission to travel abroad. In addition, Tunisian journalists
were frequently questioned by members of the security services
on the nature of press conferences and other public functions
hosted by foreigners that they attended. Foreign journalists
often complain of being followed and allege that their hotel rooms
and notes often are searched in their absence.
The Government owns and operates the Tunisian Radio and Television
Establishment (ERTT). The ERTT's coverage of government news
is taken directly from the official news agency, TAP. There are
several regional radio stations and one local cable television
channel. Bilateral agreements with France and Italy permit Tunisians
to receive the French television channel France 2 and the Italian
Rai Uno. Recent estimates put the number of satellite dishes
in country at 100,000. After blocking sales for several years,
the Government instituted regulations in 1996 to govern their
sale and installation. Dishes smuggled from Algeria are also
available on the black market in many areas.
In June the World Association of Newspapers (WAN) expelled
the Tunisian Newspaper Association for its failure to oppose repression
of freedom of the press. In expelling the Tunisian Newspaper
Association, the WAN cited its 3-year investigation of press freedoms
in Tunisia, which revealed "numerous instances...of jailing
and harassment of journalists, the banning of foreign publications
and broadcasts, and the withdrawal of passports from Tunisian
journalists."
The Press Code contains broad provisions prohibiting subversion
and defamation, neither of which is clearly defined. The Government
routinely prevented distribution of editions of foreign newspapers
and magazines that contained articles critical of Tunisia. Editions
of Le Monde and Al Hayat, for example, were embargoed several
times each month.
Following a November speech in which the President called
upon the press to exercise greater freedom of expression, one
independent newspaper and one independent political review published
articles that contained statements critical of the Government,
including those made by opposition members of the Chamber of Deputies,
with no repercussions. The Government also placed advertising
in several opposition party political reviews, thereby permitting
them to resume publication for the first time since early 1996.
Like journalists, university professors indicated that they
sometimes practiced self-censorship by avoiding classroom criticism
of the Government or statements supportive of the Islamist An-Nahda
movement. Professors alleged that the Government utilized the
threat of tax audits, control over university positions, and strict
publishing rules to encourage self-censorship. The presence of
police on campuses also discouraged dissent. Academics stated
that while the February 17 Ministry of Education circular requiring
advance notification and approval of all public conferences was
only selectively enforced, it further chilled academic freedom
and reinforced the climate of fear that prevails on campuses.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of assembly, but the
Government imposes some restrictions on this right. Groups wishing
to hold a public meeting, rally, or march must obtain a permit
from the Ministry of Interior. The authorities routinely approve
such permits, except in cases involving proscribed organizations.
Government circulars requiring advance notification of meetings,
with detailed information, imposed further restrictions on freedom
of assembly (see Section 2.a.).
Although the LTDH often had difficulty in obtaining permission
to use public spaces, the Government permitted the League in May
to hold a public celebration of its 20th anniversary. The Government
also gave the LTDH assurances that it would be permitted to hold
a public congress and elections without interference. The LTDH,
other human rights organizations, and human rights activists continued
to suffer harassment and restrictions (see Section 4).
Although the Constitution provides for freedom of association,
the Government restricts this right by barring membership in political
parties organized by religion, race, or region. On these grounds,
the Government prosecutes members of the illegal Islamist movement
An-Nahda. It also bans organizations that threaten disruption
of the public order and prosecutes members of the Communist Workers
Party. Human rights activists alleged that the Government extended
its prosecution of Islamist activists to include family members
who are not politically active (see Sections 1.d., 1.f., and 2.d.).
The Government reportedly used the charge of association with
criminal elements to prosecute these family members for crimes
allegedly committed by their relatives.
Former MDS opposition party leader Mohamed Moaada was detained
and questioned on December 19 and 20 on charges of association
with an illegal organization after he reportedly met in Europe
with leaders of the illegal Islamist movement An-Nahda. Moaada
claimed that he was placed under house arrest, where he remained
without telephone service and unable to receive visitors. The
Government maintained that Moaada was not arrested but was only
questioned in connection with his activities abroad and was required
to remain in the governorate of Tunis pending the result of a
judicial inquiry. Moaada is scheduled to appear before an investigating
judge on February 11, 1998 (see Section 2.d.).
c. Freedom of Religion
Islam is the state religion, but the Government permits the
practice of other religions. The Government controls mosques
and pays the salaries of the prayer leaders. The 1988 Law on
Mosques provides that only personnel appointed by the Government
may lead activities in the mosques.
The Government regards the Baha'i faith as a heretical sect
of Islam and permits its adherents to practice their faith only
in private. With 1,300 adherents, the Jewish community is the
country's largest indigenous religious minority. The Government
assures the Jewish community freedom of worship and pays the salary
of the Grand Rabbi. The Christian community, estimated at about
2,000, is composed mainly of foreigners. It freely holds church
services and operates a small number of schools.
The Government views proselytizing as an act against the
"public order." Authorities ask foreigners suspected
of proselytizing to depart the country and do not permit them
to return. There were no reported cases of official action against
persons suspected of proselytizing.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign
Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
The Constitution provides for these rights. People are free
to change their place of residence or work at will. In practice,
however, the Government restricts the freedom of movement and
foreign travel of those critical of the administration.
Human rights monitors complain that the Government arbitrarily
withholds passports from citizens. Although the Government returned
passports to several prominent political and human rights activists
such as Mohamed Moaada and permitted them to travel abroad, it
continued to withhold the passports of many other citizens, such
as human rights activist Moncef Marzouki. Human rights activists
alleged that the Government withheld the passports of the family
members of Islamist activists who live abroad. In November the
Government issued passports to the families of at least 10--and
possibly more--Islamist activists who live abroad. Although the
Government declined to provide comment on the case, human rights
activists reported that nearly all of the Islamists' families
who had previously been denied passports received them in November.
Rachida Ben Salem, the wife of an Islamist activist living
in Holland, was arrested on May 18 while attempting to cross the
Libyan border with a false passport. On November 19, she was
sentenced to 2 years and 3 months in prison for association with
a clandestine organization and leaving the country illegally.
Although the Government and human rights activists agree that
Ben Salem did possess a false passport, human rights activists
alleged that the Government illegally withheld Ben Salem's passport
(she had not previously been convicted of any crime) and that
the Government therefore punished Ben Salem for the alleged crimes
of her husband (see Sections 1.d. and 1.f.). In addition, because
Ben Salem was arrested before attempting to cross the Libyan border,
her defense attorneys asserted that she was convicted wrongly
of leaving the country without a passport. The Government maintained
that Ben Salem was correctly charged, prosecuted, and convicted,
and that she was treated in a fair and humane manner.
In June the Government prevented human rights activist Radhia
Nasraoui from leaving the country to testify at hearings before
the European Parliament on Tunisia.
Former opposition party leader Mohamed Moaada was put under
house arrest in April following his release of a communique critical
of the Government, which the Government claimed violated the terms
of his parole. During that time, he was prevented from leaving
his residence or receiving visitors. The Government ended Moaada's
house arrest in July but resumed it on December 20, when he was
detained briefly and questioned on charges of association with
an illegal organization (see section 2.b).
The Government has signed the 1951 U.N. Convention Relating
to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol, and cooperates
with the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) in assisting refugees. The Government acknowledged UNHCR
determination of refugee status that was accorded to 207 individuals
during the year. Approximately 100 cases await determination
by the UNHCR. The Government provides first asylum for refugees,
based on UNHCR recommendations. There is no pattern of abuse
of refugees. Although a few refugees were deported during the
year, none were forced to return to countries where they feared
persecution.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right
of Citizens to Change Their Government
The Constitution provides that the citizenry shall
elect the President and members of the legislature for 5-year
terms. However, the ability of citizens to change their government
through democratic means has yet to be demonstrated. The ruling
RCD party and its direct predecessor parties have controlled the
political arena since Tunisia gained independence in 1956. The
party dominates the Cabinet, the Chamber of Deputies, and regional
and local governments. The President appoints the Cabinet and
the 23 governors. The Government and the party are closely integrated;
the President of the Republic is also the President of the party,
and the party's Secretary General holds the rank of minister.
President Ben Ali was reelected for a 5-year term in 1994.
Under the Constitution, he can stand for reelection in 1999 for
the last time. Candidates for President must receive the endorsement
of 30 sitting deputies to launch a campaign. The 163-seat Chamber
of Deputies does not function as an effective counterweight to
the executive branch. The Electoral Code provides for a winner-take-all
formula for 144 of its seats. The ruling party won all seats
in the 1994 parliamentary elections. Nineteen additional seats
were reserved for unsuccessful candidates and divided among 4
opposition parties after the 1994 elections. Election is by secret
ballot. All legal parties are free to present candidates. In
October the Government held a special election to fill a seat
vacated by an RCD deputy who resigned to take a government post.
An RCD candidate won a freely contested election against a candidate
from the Movement of Democratic Socialists (MDS) opposition party.
In July the Chamber of Deputies approved legislation providing
for the public financing of political parties. According to the
legislation, each party represented in the Chamber of Deputies
is to receive an annual public subsidy of approximately $54,000
(60,000 dinars), paid in two installments, plus an additional
payment (to be determined by decree) which is proportional to
its number of elected deputies. Although opposition parties welcomed
the legislation as an important step toward greater political
pluralism, several parties criticized the Government for restricting
the subsidies to those parties already represented in Parliament.
Most opposition parties urged the Government to extend the legislation
to include all parties recognized by the Ministry of Interior.
As part of the same reform package, the Government also amended
the Constitution to permit greater use of popular referendums
to decide constitutional and legislative questions, although details
concerning the implementation of the amendment have not been made
public yet. The Government also adopted legislation lowering
the minimum age for election to the Chamber of Deputies from 25
to 23 and extending the right to stand as a candidate for the
Chamber of Deputies to all Tunisian citizens, whether their citizenship
was transmitted by a Tunisian mother or father.
The most vocal and active of the opposition parties, the
MDS, remained weakened following a split in its ranks in the wake
of the conviction, imprisonment, and release of party President
Moaada and party vice president Chammari in 1996. The Government
continued to recognize Ismail Boulahia as the new official MDS
president. A separate MDS faction contended that it retained
the support of a majority of the MDS ruling council and refused
to recognize Boulahia as its leader.
Women participate in politics, but they are underrepresented
in senior government positions. Twelve of the 163 members of
the Chamber of Deputies are women. In addition, one women is
the junior minister for Women's and Children's Affairs in the
Prime Minister's office.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International
and Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human
Rights
The Tunisian Human Rights League is the most active
independent advocacy organization, with branches in many parts
of the country. The organization receives and researches complaints
and protests individual and systemic abuses. Although the Government
made several important concessions to the League, it continued
to place significant obstacles in the way of its effective operation.
In May the Government permitted the LTDH to publicly mark its
20th anniversary and publish one communique. From May until August,
the Government resumed regular contact with the League for the
first time since the summer of 1996, establishing a joint committee
that met on a regular basis to discuss human rights abuses. The
Government provided assurances that the LTDH would be able to
hold a public congress and elect new local and national officers
without interference. The Government ended its meetings with
the LTDH after it accused the organization of prompting members
of the International Human Rights Federation to give inaccurate
testimony regarding Tunisia before the U.N. Human Rights Commission.
In September the League announced that the Government had agreed
to its longstanding request to conduct prison inspections, although
none were conducted before the end of the year (see also Section
1.c.).
LTDH members and other human rights activists reported government
harassment, interrogation, property loss or damage, unauthorized
home entry, and denial of passports. The LTDH continues to be
unable to find local newspapers willing to publish its communiques
that are critical of the Government. Some LTDH chapters reported
that they have been unable to hold meetings in public spaces and
that their members have suffered government reprisals--including
temporary unemployment--for their human rights activities.
In April human rights activist Radhia Nasraoui alleged that
security officials burglarized and ransacked her law office.
The office's sole computer, three telephones, and an electric
heater were stolen and Nasraoui's legal files were torn apart
and strewn on the floor. The Government maintained that the burglary
was conducted by two youths with previous criminal records and
that they were convicted for the break-in on June 19 and August
14, respectively.
In May LTDH vice President Slaheddine Jourchi was fired from
his editorial position at the independent political review Realites.
Although the Government maintained that the review was an independent
entity and not subject to government control, many activists alleged
that Jourchi was fired as a result of his controversial position
as LTDH vice president.
In June the Government reportedly pressured members of the
LTDH not to attend hearings that the European Parliament had scheduled
in Strasbourg on the human rights situation in Tunisia. Only
Radhia Nasraoui attempted to leave the country to testify at the
hearings; security officials prevented her from leaving the country
to do so.
Following the testimony of Khemais Chammari at the European
Parliament hearings in June, the press conducted a campaign of
criticism of Chammari through much of the summer, labeling him
a traitor in articles and letters. Many human rights activists
alleged that the articles and letters were prompted by the Government,
a charge that the Government denied. In September one newspaper
criticized Chammari and Saadoun Zmerli, another LTDH activist,
for their testimony before the U.N. Human Rights Commission in
Geneva.
Human rights activists Moncef Marzouki and Khemais Ksila
claimed that they suffered government retaliation for their human
rights activism. Marzouki alleged that the Government continued
to withhold his passport and deny him permission to receive and
treat patients at his medical practice. Ksila claimed that the
Government denied him permission to work and withheld his passport.
Although the Government did not comment on Marzouki's charges,
it maintained that Ksila was denied his passport correctly due
to his previous criminal conviction in a traffic accident.
The Arab Institute for Human Rights, headquartered in Tunis,
was founded in 1989 by the LTDH, the Arab Organization for Human
Rights, and the Union of Arab Lawyers. It is an information,
rather than an advocacy, organization.
Amnesty International (AI) continued to maintain a Tunisian
chapter. Its members complained that the Tunis office suffered
repeated loss of telephone and facsimile service. Hechmi Jegham,
the president of the chapter, was detained and questioned by police
on March 8 and 9, reportedly about an upcoming international lawyers
conference to which he had been invited. The Government maintained
that Jegham and two other citizens who are not members of AI were
detained in full accordance with the law for maintenance of public
order, which permits the Government to question citizens about
conferences that are scheduled to include foreign participants.
The Government continued to deny entry to a London-based AI researcher
responsible for Tunisian affairs, claiming that she has an anti-Tunisia
bias.
Although the Government permitted a few foreign human rights
researchers to enter the country, all reported that the security
services closely monitored their activities. In May the Government
permitted representatives of international human rights organizations
to address the Human Rights Committee of the Arab Lawyers Congress
and to circulate freely among the Congress' participants (see
Sections 2.a and 2.b.).
Human rights offices in certain ministries and a governmental
body, the Higher Committee for Human Rights and Basic Freedoms,
address and sometimes resolve human rights complaints. The Committee's
last publicly distributed report covered the 1993-1994 period.
Section 5 Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Religion,
Disability, Language, or Social Status
The Constitution provides that all citizens shall
have equal rights and responsibilities and be equal under the
law. The Government generally observes this in practice. Legal
or social discrimination is not prevalent.
Women
Violence against women occurs, but there are no reliable
statistics to measure its extent. The Tunisian Association of
Democratic Women operates the country's only counseling center
for women who are victims of domestic violence. The center, located
in Tunis, assists approximately 20 women per month. Instances
of rape or assault by someone unknown to the victim are rare.
Battered women first seek help from family members. Police intervention
is often ineffective because police officers and the courts tend
to regard domestic violence as a problem to be handled by the
family. Nonetheless, there are stiff penalties for spouse abuse.
Both the fine and imprisonment for battery or violence committed
by a spouse or family member are double those for the same crimes
committed by an individual not related to the victim.
Women enjoy substantial rights and the Government has made
serious efforts to advance those rights. A 1996 law, for example,
strengthened women's right to property ownership by authorizing
joint loan applications and encouraging discussion prior to marriage
of the possibility of joint ownership of property acquired during
the marriage. The Government also encouraged couples to include
language concerning joint property in their marriage contracts,
and liberalized certain family allowances to students and orphans.
Nonetheless, women still face legal and societal discrimination
in certain social and economic areas and in employment. In spite
of the Government's efforts to change property ownership practices,
most property acquired during marriage, including property acquired
solely, is still held in the name of the husband. Inheritance
laws, based on Shari'a (Islamic) law and tradition, discriminate
against women.
The junior Ministry for Women and the Family oversees programs
concerning women's issues. It maintains effective links with
women's professional associations and with the government-supported
Women's Union and Women's Research Center.
Women in increasing numbers are entering the work force,
employed particularly in the textile, manufacturing, health, and
agricultural sectors. According to government statistics for
1995, women constituted 22 percent of the work force; excluding
the agricultural sector, they accounted for 44 percent. Women
represent 42.9 percent of workers in the industrial sector and
46.1 percent of workers in the health sector. There are an estimated
1,500 businesses headed by women. Women represent one third of
the civil service, employed primarily in the fields of health,
education, and social affairs at the middle or lower levels.
Women represent 60 percent of all judges in the capital and 25
percent of the nation's total jurists. Approximately 43 percent
of the university students enrolled in the 1996-97 academic year
were women. On the other hand, while the rate of illiteracy has
dropped markedly in both rural and urban areas, the rate of female
illiteracy in all categories is at least double that of men.
Among 10- to 14-year-old children, 5.5 percent of urban girls
are illiterate, compared with 2.2 percent of urban boys; and 27
percent of rural girls, compared with less than 7 percent of rural
boys.
Several active nongovernmental organizations (NGO's) focus,
in whole or in part, on women's advocacy, or research women's
issues, and a cadre of attorneys represent women in domestic cases.
Media attention focuses on women's economic and academic accomplishments,
and usually omits reference to culturally sensitive issues.
Children
The Government demonstrates a strong commitment to public
education, which is compulsory until age 16. Primary school enrollment
for the 1996-97 scholastic year was roughly the same as the preceding
year; secondary school enrollment showed an 8 percent increase.
The Government reported that 98 percent of children attend school
full-time. The Government offers a maternal and child health
program, providing pre- and post-natal services. It sponsors
an immunization program targeting preschool-aged children, and
reports that over 95 percent of children are vaccinated.
In 1995 the Government promulgated laws to constitute a code
for the protection of children. The code proscribes child abuse,
abandonment, and sexual or economic exploitation. Penalties for
convictions for abandonment and assault on minors are severe.
There is a Ministry for Children and Youths and a presidential
delegate to safeguard the rights and welfare of children.
People with Disabilities
The law prohibits discrimination based on disability and
mandates that at least 1 percent of the public and private sector
jobs be reserved for the disabled.
All public buildings constructed since 1991 must be accessible
to physically disabled persons. Many cities, including the capital,
have begun to install wheelchair access ramps on city sidewalks.
There is a general trend toward making public transportation
more accessible to disabled persons. The Government issues special
cards to the disabled for benefits such as unrestricted parking,
priority medical services, preferential seating on public transportation,
and consumer discounts.
Indigenous People
The Government estimates that a small Berber minority constitutes
less than 3 percent of the population. Some older Berbers have
retained their native language, but the younger generation has
been assimilated into Tunisian culture through schooling and marriage.
Berbers are free to participate in politics and to express themselves
culturally.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The Constitution and the Labor Code stipulate the right of
workers to form unions. The Tunisian General Federation of Labor
(UGTT) is the country's only labor federation and claims about
15 percent of the work force as members, including civil servants
and employees of state-owned enterprises. There is no legal prohibition
against the establishment of other labor federations. A union
may be dissolved only by court order.
The UGTT and its member unions are legally independent of
the Government and the ruling party but operate under regulations
that restrict their freedom of action. The UGTT's membership includes
persons associated with all political tendencies, although Islamists
have been removed from union offices. The current UGTT leadership
follows a policy of cooperation with the Government and its economic
reform program. There are credible reports that the UGTT receives
substantial government subsidies to supplement modest union dues
and funding from the National Social Security Account. In April
authorities arrested four UGTT members who signed a petition that
criticized the UGTT secretary general (see Section 2.a.).
Unions, including those representing civil servants, have
the right to strike, provided they give 10 days' advance notice
to the UGTT and it approves of the strike. This advance approval,
however, is rarely sought in practice. In recent years, the majority
of strikes have been illegal because the UGTT has not approved
them in advance. However, the Government has not prosecuted workers
for illegal strike activity. The International Confederation
of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) has characterized the requirement
for prior UGTT approval of strikes as a violation of worker rights.
The law prohibits retribution against strikers, but some employers
punish them nevertheless, forcing the strikers to pursue costly
and time-consuming legal remedies to protect their rights.
Labor disputes are settled through conciliation panels in
which labor and management are equally represented. Tripartite
regional arbitration commissions settle industrial disputes when
conciliation fails.
Unions are free to associate with international bodies.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The right to organize and bargain collectively is protected
by law and observed in practice. Wages and working conditions
are set by triennial negotiations between the UGTT member unions
and employers.
Forty-seven collective bargaining agreements set standards
for industries in the private sector and cover 80 percent of the
total private sector work force. Each accord is negotiated by
representatives of unions and employers in the area it covered.
The Government's role in these negotiations is minimal, consisting
mainly of lending its good offices if talks appear to be stalled.
However, the Government must approve, but may not modify, the
agreements. When approved, the agreements set standards for all
employees, both union and nonunion, in the areas they cover.
The UGTT also negotiates wages and work conditions of civil
servants and employees of state-owned enterprises.
The law prohibits antiunion discrimination by employers.
The UGTT, however, is concerned about antiunion activity among
private sector employers, especially the firing of union activists
and the use of temporary workers to avoid unionization. In certain
industries, such as textiles and construction, temporary workers
account for a large majority of the work force. The Labor Code
protects temporary workers, but enforcement is more difficult
than in the case of permanent workers. A committee chaired by
an officer from the Labor Inspectorate of the Office of the Inspector
General of the Ministry of Social Affairs, and including a labor
representative and an employers' association representative, approves
all worker dismissals.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
Tunisia abolished compulsory labor in 1989. The law now
prohibits forced or compulsory labor by either adults or children
and it is not known to occur.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age
for Employment
The law prohibits forced and bonded child labor, and the
Government enforces this prohibition effectively (see Section
6.c.). The minimum age for employment in manufacturing is 16
years. The minimum age for light work in agriculture and some
other nonindustrial sectors is 13 years. The law also requires
children to attend school until age 16. Workers between the ages
of 14 and 18 must have 12 hours of rest a day, which include the
hours between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Children between 14 and 16 may
work no more than 2 hours a day. The total time that they spend
in school and work may not exceed 7 hours per day. Inspectors
of the Ministry of Social Affairs examine the records of employees
to verify that employers comply with the minimum age law. Nonetheless,
young children often perform agricultural work in rural areas
and work as vendors in urban areas, primarily during the summer
vacation from school.
The UGTT has expressed concern that child labor continues
to exist disguised as apprenticeship, particularly in the handicraft
industry, and in the cases of young girls whose families place
them as household domestics in order to collect their wages.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
The Labor Code provides for a range of administratively determined
minimum wages, which are set by a commission of representatives
from the Ministries of Social Affairs, Planning, Finance, and
National Economy in consultation with the UGTT and the employers'
association. The President approves the commission's recommendations.
The minimum wage schedule was adjusted in August and in November.
After the second increase, the industrial minimum wage is $155
(170 dinars) per month for a 48-hour workweek and $136 (149 dinars)
per month for a 40-hour workweek. The agricultural minimum wage
is $4.74 (5.20 dinars) per day. When supplemented by transportation
and family allowances, the minimum wage covers only essential
costs for a worker and family.
The Labor Code sets a standard 48-hour workweek for most
sectors and requires one 24-hour rest period.
Regional labor inspectors are responsible for enforcing standards.
They inspect most firms about once every 2 years. However, the
Government often encounters difficulty in enforcing the minimum
wage law, particularly in nonunionized sectors of the economy.
Moreover, more than 240,000 workers are employed in the informal
sector, which falls outside the purview of labor legislation.
The Ministry of Social Affairs has responsibility for enforcing
health and safety standards in the workplace. There are special
government regulations covering such hazardous occupations as
mining, petroleum engineering, and construction. Working conditions
and standards tend to be better in firms that are export-oriented
than in those producing exclusively for the domestic market.
Workers are free to remove themselves from dangerous situations
without jeopardizing their employment, and they may take legal
action against employers who retaliate against them for exercising
this right.
Source: U.S. State Department Report on Human Rights Practices
for 1997.
|