In an interview with the "Beyond the News" program, Marari explained - in an episode of the "Beyond the News" program - that the "EFDI" organization submitted a complaint to the United Nations Working Group against Torture, the Special Rapporteur on the protection of health and the refusal of inhuman treatment, noting that the International Organization I also submitted a few days ago an urgent appeal to the Committee Against Enforced Disappearances, on the grounds that what happened to Al-Buhairi was nothing but a kidnapping, especially in light of the Tunisian Public Prosecution denying any connection to this arrest, and therefore they are arbitrary decisions that are not based on law.

Marari, who is director of the Middle East and North Africa department at EFDI, revealed that the UN human rights rapporteur will visit Tunisia in a few days to review the human rights file in the country in light of the exceptional decisions of President Qais Saeed.

Human rights organizations from Geneva and Paris had expressed their intention to file a complaint with the United Nations against Tunisian President Kais Saied and Interior Minister Tawfiq Sharaf El-Din, against the background of what they described as the kidnapping and detention of the leader of the Ennahda movement, Noureddine Al-Buhairi.

For her part, Al-Buhairi's wife, Saeeda Al-Akrimi, confirmed that she will sue prominent security leaders, including the commander of the Tunisian National Guard, on charges of kidnapping and forcibly disappearing her husband.

local and international movement

On the other hand, university professor and former member of the National Constituent Assembly, Rabeh Al-Kharaifi, said that the complaints submitted by human rights organizations will not entail criminal penalties against Tunisia.

Al-Kharaifi considered that the effect of these steps is to mobilize human rights to put pressure on the Tunisian state, describing this as unacceptable at the national level, especially since the situation of Al-Buhairi does not fit the description of enforced disappearance, as he put it.

However, lawyer and human rights activist Shukri Azzouz considered that the complaints submitted by international human rights organizations go in parallel with the complaints that were submitted in Tunisia to the representative of the Public Prosecution and the Tunisian courts, justifying the work on parallel options that “the crime committed by the Tunisian state against Al-Buhairi is a criminal act at the internal and international levels.” Especially that Tunisia has signed conventions against enforced disappearance and human rights violations, which makes these agreements binding on Tunisia internationally, and they were also adopted locally.

This comes as Al-Buhairi's defense team continues its battle against the Tunisian authorities, considering that they arrested him after violating him and his wife a full-fledged crime that violated all constitutional covenants and guarantees.

The commission called on Tunisian lawyers to stand in solidarity with what it described as their colleague before he was a representative of the Ennahda movement or a former minister of justice.

The Executive Office of the Ennahda Movement had demanded the immediate release of Nour El-Din El-Behairy and Fathi El-Baladi, and considered them to be forcibly detained, in the absence of any judicial permission.

The movement denounced the continuation of what it called campaigns to distort the judiciary, through attempts to control it by presidential decrees and calling for the dissolution of the Supreme Judicial Council, under the pretext of reform.

The Ennahda movement also called for a boycott of the electronic referendum, stressing that it is a focus of individual rule, and for participation in the January 14 demonstrations in rejection of Said's decisions.