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‘Tunisian foreign fighters to be dealt with under anti-terrorism law’

December 30, 2016 at 11:12 pm

General view of Tunisia’s government in parliament in Tunis, Tunisia [Anadolu]

Returning Tunisian militants will be immediately arrested and judged under anti-terrorism laws, the prime minister said, seeking to calm fears over the homecoming of some of the country’s several thousand jihadists.

Tunisia is among the countries with the highest per capita number of militant Islamists, a problem linked to widespread radicalisation among disillusioned youth and a loosening of security controls after Tunisia’s 2011 uprising.

More than 3,000 Tunisians are known to have travelled abroad to fight abroad, according to the interior ministry. Last week, the interior minister said 800 had already come back to Tunisia, without giving details on what had happened after their return.

Prime Minister Youssef Chahed said returnees would be dealt with according to a 2015 anti-terrorism law that is designed to ease the arrest and prosecution of suspected militants.

“Those who come back will be arrested immediately after their arrival on Tunisian soil and will be judged under the anti-terrorism law,” Chahed told state TV late yesterday.

He also said authorities had comprehensive records on militants who had left the country. “We have all the details on them, we know them one by one, and we have taken all the necessary measures,” he said.

The comments by Chahed, a member of the Nidaa Tounes party, came amid a fierce political debate over how to deal with foreign fighters.

Some politicians have called for them to be stripped of their nationality, though the right to citizenship is protected under the constitution.

Politicians from the Ennahda party, part of the governing coalition, have said Tunisia is still responsible for returning militants and that the government cannot prevent them from coming back.

Tunisia’s anti-terrorism law was passed last year in the wake of two major attacks against foreign tourists by Daesh gunmen, the first at the Bardo museum in Tunis, and the second on a beach in the Tunisian city of Sousse.

The law was criticised by human rights groups concerned about an authoritarian backlash by Tunisian security forces.