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Reuters
Reuters
Politics

Tunisia military prosecutors investigates journalist for 'harming public order'

Tunisian military prosecutors said on Saturday they had opened an investigation against a journalist on suspicion of "harming public order and the impartiality of the army" for saying the president had asked the army to close the headquarters of the UGTT labour union.

The journalist, Salah Attia, told Al Jazeera on Saturday that President Kais Saied had asked the army to close the powerful union's headquarters and put its leaders under house arrest, but that the army had refused.

Saied has been facing growing criticism that he seeks to consolidate one-man rule since seizing power last summer in a move his opponents called a coup. He subsequently set aside the 2014 constitution to rule by decree and dismissed the elected parliament.

The president last month called for a national dialogue to prepare a "new constitution for a new republic" and excluded main political parties, while other major players such as the UGTT refused to participate in what it said would be a dialogue with a predetermined outcome.

The leader of the UGTT, which has about a 1 million members, said on Thursday it was being "targeted" by authorities after it refused to participate in the talks on a new constitution.

(The story is refiled to add dropped word "criticism")

(Reporting by Tarek Amara; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Jonathan Oatis)

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