Mahdi Zagrouba collapses in court after being arrested on suspicion of assaulting a police officer
16 May 2024 - 15:58
by Agency Staff
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Lawyers accompanied by members of civil society groups protest over the recent arrest of two of their colleagues, one of whom they say was tortured during his detention, outside the Palace of Justice in Tunis, Tunisia, May 16 2024. Picture: REUTERS/JIHED ABIDELLAOUI
Tunis — Tunisia’s interior ministry on Thursday dismissed accusations by lawyers and a rights group that police officers had tortured a detained attorney who collapsed in court.
The attorney Mahdi Zagrouba — a critic of President Kais Saied — was arrested on Monday on suspicion of verbally and physically assaulting a police officer during protests against the arrest of another lawyer, prosecutors said.
Zagrouba appeared in front of an investigating magistrate on Wednesday, told the hearing he had been tortured by officers, then collapsed and was taken to hospital, fellow lawyers and witnesses said.
“He mentioned the names of the policemen who tortured him before he suffered a collapse and coma,” lawyer Souad Boker, who was representing Zagrouba, said.
The interior ministry said it strongly denied the accusations.
“We categorically deny that the lawyer was subjected to torture or ill-treatment. It is a scenario to escape responsibility after it was proved that he assaulted a policeman during a protest this week,” ministry official Fakher Bouzghaia said.
“All detention centres are equipped with surveillance cameras,” Bouzghaia said.
Without referring to the allegations, Saied said in a statement after a meeting with justice minister Laila Jafel that the state was responsible for guaranteeing every prisoner the right to treatment that preserves their dignity.
Saied took office after free elections in 2019, but two years later shut down the elected parliament. He has since ruled by decree — a move that he has said is necessary to take on what he calls a corrupt elite. His critics have called it a coup.
Brutal torture
Zagrouba, who has criticised the president, was detained by police who stormed the bar association’s headquarters on Monday for the second time in two days.
The state TAP news agency quoted another of Zarouba’s attorneys, Boubaker Ben Thabet, as saying Zagrouba had been subjected to “systematic torture” during his detention.
Toumi Ben Farhat, another lawyer representing Zagrouba, said his colleague “was subjected to extremely severe torture”.
Bassam Trifi, the head of the Tunisian League for Human Rights, said that “Zagrouba was subjected to brutal torture, and I personally witnessed the torture on his body”.
The Bar Association said torture deserves criminal prosecution, that it held ministry of interior officers responsible and that it had called for a national strike on Thursday.
A day after Zagrouba’s arrest, the EU said it was concerned about a number of imprisonments of civil society figures, journalists and political activists, and demanded clarifications from Tunisia.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Tunisia denies torturing lawyer during detention
Mahdi Zagrouba collapses in court after being arrested on suspicion of assaulting a police officer
Tunis — Tunisia’s interior ministry on Thursday dismissed accusations by lawyers and a rights group that police officers had tortured a detained attorney who collapsed in court.
The attorney Mahdi Zagrouba — a critic of President Kais Saied — was arrested on Monday on suspicion of verbally and physically assaulting a police officer during protests against the arrest of another lawyer, prosecutors said.
Zagrouba appeared in front of an investigating magistrate on Wednesday, told the hearing he had been tortured by officers, then collapsed and was taken to hospital, fellow lawyers and witnesses said.
“He mentioned the names of the policemen who tortured him before he suffered a collapse and coma,” lawyer Souad Boker, who was representing Zagrouba, said.
The interior ministry said it strongly denied the accusations.
“We categorically deny that the lawyer was subjected to torture or ill-treatment. It is a scenario to escape responsibility after it was proved that he assaulted a policeman during a protest this week,” ministry official Fakher Bouzghaia said.
“All detention centres are equipped with surveillance cameras,” Bouzghaia said.
Without referring to the allegations, Saied said in a statement after a meeting with justice minister Laila Jafel that the state was responsible for guaranteeing every prisoner the right to treatment that preserves their dignity.
Saied took office after free elections in 2019, but two years later shut down the elected parliament. He has since ruled by decree — a move that he has said is necessary to take on what he calls a corrupt elite. His critics have called it a coup.
Brutal torture
Zagrouba, who has criticised the president, was detained by police who stormed the bar association’s headquarters on Monday for the second time in two days.
The state TAP news agency quoted another of Zarouba’s attorneys, Boubaker Ben Thabet, as saying Zagrouba had been subjected to “systematic torture” during his detention.
Toumi Ben Farhat, another lawyer representing Zagrouba, said his colleague “was subjected to extremely severe torture”.
Bassam Trifi, the head of the Tunisian League for Human Rights, said that “Zagrouba was subjected to brutal torture, and I personally witnessed the torture on his body”.
The Bar Association said torture deserves criminal prosecution, that it held ministry of interior officers responsible and that it had called for a national strike on Thursday.
A day after Zagrouba’s arrest, the EU said it was concerned about a number of imprisonments of civil society figures, journalists and political activists, and demanded clarifications from Tunisia.
Reuters
Two Tunisian journalists jailed pending trial
Tunisia extends detention of journalists as lawyers strike
Tunisian police arrest lawyer critical of president
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