Tunisian Parliament Questions Six Ministers

General view of the Tunisian parliament (File/Reuters)
General view of the Tunisian parliament (File/Reuters)
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Tunisian Parliament Questions Six Ministers

General view of the Tunisian parliament (File/Reuters)
General view of the Tunisian parliament (File/Reuters)

The Tunisian parliament held a questioning session for six ministers of the government of Hichem Mechichi, during which the current cabinet was heavily criticized.

Most of the ministers remain in their positions without a clear constitutional basis, after President Kais Saeid refused to receive 11 ministers for constitutional oath following the ministerial reshuffle.

The session included the Foreign Minister, the Acting Minister of Local Affairs and the Environment, the Minister of Tourism, the Acting Minister of Cultural Affairs, the Minister of Religious Affairs, the Acting Minister of State Property and Real Estate Affairs, and the Minister of Housing and Infrastructure.

During the session, some parties in the ruling coalition and opposition parties asked Mechichi to visit the parliament and address citizens about the reality of the situation in the country.

Head of the Tahya Tounes bloc, Mustapha Ben Ahmed, said that the plenary sessions with the ministers are frequent and ceremonial, especially in the absence of the prime minister and his failure to address parliamentarians directly. He indicated that Mechichi only listens to some ministers every now and then.

He warned that the situation in Tunisia is very dangerous, coupled with an unprecedented economic and social crisis.

“All political and social parties must assume their responsibility" to get the country out of this dark tunnel, according to Ben Ahmed.

Observers believe that the parliament’s recent sessions are directed in particular at the president after he rejected the ministerial reshuffle.



4 Killed in Israeli Strike on Lebanese village

Smoke ascends after an Israeli air raid on the town of Chamaa in southern Lebanon on August 1, 2024. (Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP)
Smoke ascends after an Israeli air raid on the town of Chamaa in southern Lebanon on August 1, 2024. (Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP)
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4 Killed in Israeli Strike on Lebanese village

Smoke ascends after an Israeli air raid on the town of Chamaa in southern Lebanon on August 1, 2024. (Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP)
Smoke ascends after an Israeli air raid on the town of Chamaa in southern Lebanon on August 1, 2024. (Photo by KAWNAT HAJU / AFP)

An Israeli airstrike on a southern Lebanese village has killed four people and wounded five, Lebanon’s Health Ministry said on Thursday.

The ministry said the four killed in the airstrike on the village of Chamaa were Syrian citizens. It said five Lebanese citizens were wounded in the same airstrike.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said in a speech Thursday that his fighters had stopped carrying out attacks along the border following an Israeli airstrike on Beirut on Tuesday that killed Fouad Shukur, a top military commander with the group.

Hezbollah later said that it fired dozens of Katyusha rockets toward the Matzuva kibbutz in northern Israel in retaliation for the airstrike.

Nasrallah said Hezbollah will resume attacks on Friday but this will not be part of the retaliation that the group plans to carry for Shukur’s death.

Israel said the strike that killed Shukur was in retaliation for a rocket attack on Saturday that killed 12 young people in the town of Majdal Shams in Syria’s Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. Nasrallah on Thursday repeated the group’s denials that it fired the rocket that struck Majdal Shams.