Contributor(s)Avocats sans frontières / experts indépendants
Introduction
Since the Tunisian revolution (December 2010-January 2011), numerous reforms have been implemented. The national preventive mechanism for torture (MNP) entered into effect in 2016. A current pilot project aims to establish probation and alternative sentencing practices. A new code of criminal procedure is due to be evaluated by the Assembly of the Representatives of the People. These reforms have been encouraged by international actors such as the European Union (EU) and the Council of Europe (CoE), as well as foreign non-governmental organisations (NGO) and civil society organisations. Institutional instability has delayed the implementation of these reforms.
Despite these efforts, prisons still suffer from a number of significant structural problems. The national prison administration has struggled to implement a centralised census system for the country’s incarcerated population. Current statistics are unreliable and published at irregular intervals.
More than half of incarcerated people are awaiting trial. Access to medical treatment, work, and recreational activities is precarious. Telephone calls are forbidden. Visits take place once a week, for a maximum duration of 20 minutes. Prisoners depend on food packages from family members for adequate nutrition.
Prisoners are placed together in groups of 50 to 100 in dormitories, regardless of their legal status or other classification criteria. The dormitory head, named the cabrane, organises life within a dormitory. This delegation of authority is the cause of many abuses.
Kmar Bendana: Professor of Modern History at the University of Manouba and Research Associate at the Research Institute on Contemporary Maghreb (IRMC).