Saied's Grip and the Silenced Diaspora: Tunisia's Democratic Collapse Plays Out Across Two Continents

Iskandar Naouar's report from Tunis on 18 April 2026 — Gazans stranded in Tunisia marking Palestinian Prisoners' Day — captured a quietly devastating image: people displaced from one eroding political order seeking solidarity from a society experiencing its own. The Gazans in Tunis are not metaphors. They are families caught in the logistical chaos of a regional war, unable to return to a destroyed Gaza and hosted by a Tunisian state that Kais Saied has been systematically transforming since his 2021 self-coup into a presidential autocracy that inverts the gains of the 2011 Jasmine Revolution.
The connection between these two situations — Palestinian displacement and Tunisian democratic collapse — is not rhetorical. Both are products of the deep structural relationship between authoritarian Arab state consolidation and Western geopolitical tolerance of that consolidation when it serves stability and counter-terrorism interests. Tunisia's transformation under Saied has been funded, at least in part, by EU migration management payments designed to keep North African migrants out of European waters — paying autocrats to police their own populations so European voters don't have to see the consequences of European policy on their shores.
What Saied Has Built Since 2021
The architecture of Saied's consolidation is now essentially complete. A 2022 referendum replaced the 2014 constitution — widely regarded as the Arab world's most democratic post-revolutionary founding document — with a text that concentrates executive authority in the presidency, reduces the parliament to an advisory function, and eliminates the independent constitutional court that was designed to arbitrate between branches. Parliamentary elections held under the new system produced a legislature with single-digit turnout in some districts — boycotted by every major opposition party — whose members Saied himself acknowledged were largely unknown to him.
The independent judiciary has been purged through a 2022 decree that allowed Saied to dismiss 57 judges without appeal — including several who had ruled against his interests. The bar association, the journalists' syndicate, and the teachers' union have been subject to persistent legal harassment. Most critically for the diaspora dimension, Saied in 2023 made extrajudicial statements characterizing sub-Saharan African migrants in Tunisia as part of a "demographic conspiracy" — language that triggered attacks on Black Africans in Tunis and Sfax and produced an international outcry that EU officials diplomatically managed to absorb without rupturing the migration cooperation arrangement.
The Diaspora's Political Moment
Tunisia's diaspora — approximately 1.5 million people concentrated in France, Italy, Germany, and Canada — has historically been the most organized external opposition to authoritarian Tunisian governments. Under Ben Ali, diaspora networks maintained the civic infrastructure that domestic repression prevented from existing inside the country. That role has reasserted itself under Saied: organizations in Paris, Lyon, and Marseille that were founded after 2011 as civil society capacity-building initiatives have pivoted back to opposition function, hosting exiled politicians, documenting arrests, and maintaining pressure on EU member-state governments that have financial reasons to look away.
The diaspora's effectiveness is constrained by two structural factors that Rashid Khalidi's analysis of Palestinian diasporic politics illuminates by analogy. First, diasporic political communities tend to fragment over time as generational distance from the homeland increases and as integration into host-country political parties redirects energy. The Tunisian diaspora's first generation is aging; its children are French or Italian citizens with French or Italian political priorities. Second, diaspora organizations lack the coercive leverage that would make EU governments treat their advocacy as more than a minority-constituency pressure to be managed rather than a foreign policy priority to be addressed.
Saudi and Emirati financial support for Saied's government — quiet, consistent, and explicitly framed as an alternative to the IMF conditionality that Saied has resisted — has given the Tunisian president a fiscal lifeline that reduces his dependence on EU budget support and therefore his vulnerability to EU political pressure. The Gulf states' interest in a stable, non-Islamist North African government that controls Mediterranean migration routes aligns with their broader interest in containing political Islam as a regional force, regardless of what happens to democratic institutions in the process.
The IMF Non-Deal and Its Consequences
Tunisia's relationship with the International Monetary Fund is the sharpest point of domestic political tension. A $1.9 billion IMF agreement negotiated in 2022 collapsed in 2023 when Saied publicly rejected the subsidy reform conditions attached to it, calling IMF prescriptions "dictates" that Tunisia would not accept. This was domestically popular — fuel and food subsidies matter enormously to Tunisians experiencing 10%+ inflation — but it left the government with a financing gap that Gulf bilateral support and domestic borrowing have only partially filled.
The consequences are now material: foreign exchange reserves have fallen to levels that limit the Central Bank of Tunisia's ability to defend the dinar, public sector wage arrears have accumulated in some ministries, and external debt servicing is consuming a rising share of government revenue. For the diaspora in France watching their families' purchasing power erode in real time, the economic deterioration is inseparable from the political question — but Saied has successfully constructed a narrative in which the economic crisis is caused by "speculators" and foreign interference rather than by his government's fiscal choices.
A well-documented pattern in authoritarian statecraft applies here: governments that cannot deliver economic improvement channel popular frustration toward external enemies and internal traitors. Saied's escalating rhetoric against opposition politicians — several of whom are in pre-trial detention — and his conspiracy narratives about Zionists, speculators, and foreign agents follow this template with textbook fidelity. The Gazans in Tunis marking Palestinian Prisoners' Day are, in this context, both guests of Tunisian solidarity and unwitting props in a political theater that their host state deploys to demonstrate anti-imperialist credentials it no longer earns through its domestic conduct.
Stakes: The Contagion Question
Tunisia matters beyond its borders because it was the proof of concept for Arab democratization that the entire post-2011 regional narrative was built on. Its collapse under Saied is not merely a local failure; it is a data point in the longer argument about whether parliamentary democracy is transferable across different political economies or whether it requires specific material conditions — a substantial middle class, an independent private sector, civilian control of security services — that the Arab world's colonial inheritance systematically prevented from developing.
The diaspora organizations pressing EU governments on Tunisia are not wrong that external pressure matters. But the structural incentives — EU migration management money, Gulf fiscal support, U.S. counterterrorism cooperation — run strongly in the direction of tolerating Saied's authoritarianism rather than conditioning relationships on democratic performance. Unless that incentive structure changes, the diaspora's advocacy will remain noise that diplomatic systems are organized to absorb without responding to.
Monexus's MENA desk noted that the Palestinian community in Tunis received one wire report on Palestinian Prisoners' Day — from PressTV — while Saied's ongoing judicial purge received no English-language coverage in the same period, reflecting the sourcing bias of wire agencies: they follow official government statements, not the slow erosion of institutional independence.