The court was said to have found Mr Marzouki’s actions, including calls for protests, as “assaulting the external security of the state.”
A Tunisian court has issued a verdict in absentia sentencing former president Moncef Marzouki to four years in prison after he criticised President Kais Saied and called for protests.
The court found against Mr Marzouki on charges of “assaulting the external security of the state”, according to the state news agency TAP.
Mr Marzouki, who lives in Paris, has described Mr Saied’s seizure of powers in July as a coup, called for protests against him, and asked that a major international meeting of French-speaking countries be moved from Tunisia.
Mr Saied has rejected accusations that his seizure of powers, suspension of parliament, and plans to change the constitution are a coup.
He said he acted to end protracted political paralysis and that a referendum will be held next year on a new constitution followed by parliamentary elections.
Foreign donors needed to help address a looming crisis in Tunisia’s public finances have urged Mr Saied to restore normal constitutional order and say democracy and freedom of speech are important to their relationship with the North African country.
After Tunisia’s 2011 revolution that introduced democracy, an elected assembly appointed Mr Marzouki as the interim president, overseeing the transition to a new constitution in 2014.
(Reuters/NAN)