Tunisian MPs refuse to dissolve
parliament
11 October 2013
Source: Middle East Monitor
Mustafa Ben Jaafar The Tunisian
Prime Ministry has issued a statement saying that the deputies of the
parliament are refusing to dissolve it, claiming that this would lead to
"chaos".
Meanwhile
other deputies have threatened to withdraw their confidence from the current
Head of Parliament, Mustafa Ben Jaafar, after he cancelled a session scheduled
to discuss the national dialogue initiative.
According to the ministry's
statement, during a meeting between MPs and Prime Minister Ali Laarayed, the
MPs expressed their support for the national dialogue initiative "as long
as it supports legitimacy and commits to serving the people's trust in elected
officials". The MPs stressed that they will only "surrender the
Constituent Assembly (parliament) Secretariat to those entrusted by the people
through elections and will continue to draw up required laws that ensure the
state's continuity."
Under the national dialogue
initiative put forward by the General Union of Tunisian Workers, the Tunisian
League for Human Rights, the National Bar Association, the Federation of
Industry and Commerce and others, the government and the parliament would be
dissolved and an election commission formed to schedule the next elections.
Meanwhile, on Thursday the MPs
protested a decision by Ben Jaafar to cancel a scheduled public meeting to
discuss the national dialogue initiative, according to one MP. The MP, who
preferred to remain anonymous, said that dozens of MPs have threatened to withdraw
their confidence from Ben Jaafar's role as Head of Parliament due to his
decision to cancel the meeting, and they have given him a list of 60 deputies
who had already agreed to sign on.
According to parliamentary law, in
order to withdraw confidence from the Head of the Parliament, at least 70
deputies must sign onto a list to be presented for discussion at a plenary
session and then voted on with the majority supporting the vote.
Meanwhile, preliminary hearings to
initiate the national dialogue continue while the participating political
forces are still looking into the legal obstacles facing the formation of a new
body called the Independent Elections High Authority, which would replace the
Interior Ministry's role to oversee future elections.
- See more at:
http://www.middleeastmonitor.com/news/africa/7790-tunisian-mps-refuse-to-dissolve-parliament-#sthash.uETEeXx0.JEQj31m5.dpuf
11 October 2013
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