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Tunisian Interior Minister Taoufik Charfeddine resigns

Charfeddine, a close aide of President Kais Saied, has appeared less frequently in public in recent months.

Tunisian Interior Minister Taoufik Charfeddine says he has resigned due to family reasons as the government cracks down on prominent opposition figures and a campaign against sub-Saharan Africans provokes international ire.

Charfeddine, a close aide of President Kais Saied, told reporters on Friday that he wants to spend more time with his children after the death of his wife, Salwa, last year.

Charfeddine, 54, who had held his post since October 2021, told reporters he wished to thank the president for “his understanding and for allowing me to be relieved of my duties”.

Salwa died in a fire caused by a gas leak in their home in June.

Saied has not yet announced a replacement for Charfeddine, who at one stage was seen as the Tunisian official closest to the president, but in recent months, he had appeared less frequently in public.

Saied has taken increasing control over security forces since July 2021 when he dismissed the government of Hichem Mechichishut down parliament and moved to rule by decree before writing a new constitution that passed last year.

Charfeddine had also served as interior minister under Mechichi, who sacked him in January 2021 as relations between the president and prime minister broke down. Saied reappointed him after dismissing Mechichi.

Over recent weeks, Tunisian authorities have detained prominent opposition figures who accuse Saied of a coup, and charged them with conspiring against state security.

Police have also carried out a crackdown on sub-Saharan Africans who lack residence permits. Human rights groups accuse them of detaining hundreds of people and turning a blind eye to racist attacks.

According to a February 21 Facebook post, Saied called on security forces and authorities to detain and deport immigrants, and he called migration a conspiracy to change Tunisia’s demographics by making it “only an African country” without an affiliation to the Arab and Islamic world.

Police subsequently detained hundreds of migrants, landlords summarily evicted hundreds from their homes and hundreds of others were fired from their jobs, the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights said.

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