Following
three days of debate, the law was adopted late on Friday night, with
172 members of parliament voting in favour and ten abstentions,
according to Al Jazeera’s Hashem Ahelbarra, reporting from the capital
Tunis.
The
new laws impose the death penalty as a possible sentence for a range of
“terror” offences and will allow authorities to detain terror suspects
for up to 15 days without access to a lawyer, our correspondent
reported.
The
president of the parliamentary assembly, Mohamed Ennaceur, called the
passing of the law a “historic” moment and said it would “reassure” the
nation’s citizens.
The
new legislation comes after a gunman massacred 38 tourists on a
Tunisian beach in an attack in Sousse claimed by ISIL on June 26.
In March, an attack on the Bardo museum in the Tunis that was also claimed by ISIL left 21 tourists dead.
“Millions
of Tunisians have been grappling with the recent violence and … they
say this is something that has to be addressed,” Ahelbarra said.
The death penalty already exists under Tunisian law, for such crimes as murder and rape, but no one has been hanged since 1991.
Rights groups had hoped parliament would leave it out of the anti-terror bill.
Advocacy groups, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, have condemned the bill.
Describing
it as draconian, they said the bill’s definition of terrorist crimes is
too vague and that it fails to adequately safeguard the rights of
defendants and could undermine freedoms.
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