The Tunisian Ennahda movement affirmed its rejection of what it described as discourses dividing Tunisians and inciting them against each other, and stigmatizing them as labor and treason.

In a statement on Saturday, the movement held the country's authorities responsible for the escalation of threats and indecent assault on political leaders opposing the measures of President Qais Saeed.

Al-Nahda called for unity in the ranks, stopping this decline in discourse, upholding the value of national unity and settling disputes by civilized, civilized methods.

It also announced its rejection of the policy of increasing pressure on the judiciary and attempts to use it to liquidate political opponents "in a way that threatens civil peace and increases the tension in the crisis social conditions."

The movement did not specify the parties that made the threats and indecent assault, but it warned of the dangers of insisting on perpetuating the country's isolation "by undermining the constitutional and democratic structure, and disrupting Tunisia's foreign relations to the detriment of its vital economic, commercial and social interests."

It renewed its support for all national initiatives seeking to counter the coup and working to protect rights and freedoms, build democracy and find national solutions to the economic and financial crisis, and called on Tunisian men and women to support the "National Salvation Front" and rally around it.

It also renewed its rejection of the presidential decree that "damaged the Independent High Authority for Elections in its composition and independence."

Since July 25, 2021, Tunisia has been experiencing a severe political crisis following exceptional measures that President Said began to impose, including the dissolution of parliament, the abolition of the constitutionality monitoring body, the issuance of legislation by presidential decrees, and the dissolution of the Supreme Judicial Council.