A/HRC/40/58/Add.1
is comprised of first instance courts, courts of appeal and a Court of cassation. Complaints
by individuals against public institutions can be heard in a separate three-tier system of
administrative courts. Delays in the election of the members of the Supreme Judicial Council
has prevented the establishment of the 12-member Constitutional Court, one-third of whose
membership are to be nominated by the Council, with the rest by the President and by the
Assembly.
26.
The Supreme Judicial Council, established by articles 112 to 114 of the Constitution,
is an independent body responsible for the effective administration of justice and ensuring
the independence of the judiciary. This includes its responsibility of ensuring the Branch’s
financial independence by overseeing the preparation of budgets for parliamentary
consideration (Article 113).
27.
Article six of the Constitution guarantees freedom of religion or belief for everyone.
3 Other Constitutional provisions reinforce this guarantee through a commitment to
fundamental human rights, especially those relating to freedom of religion, association and
peaceful assembly; those related to guarantees for equality before the law (Article 21); and
those provisions that promote the principle of proportionality required for the establishment
of limitations of these rights (Article 49). In the absence of a law specific to guaranteeing
freedom of religion or belief, it remains to be seen whether the limitations applicable to
freedom of religion or belief will comply fully with the exhaustive list of grounds for
limitation identified by Article 18 (3) of the ICCPR, rather than the formula provided under
Article 19 (3) of the Covenant.4
28.
Article 6 of the Constitution also guarantees the ‘neutrality’ of mosques and places of
worship from all partisan instrumentalization. The state endeavours to promote the values of
moderation and tolerance, the protection of the sacred and the prohibition of all violations
thereof. The Government also prohibits and works to combat calls for Takfir and the
incitement of violence and hatred. However, while article 6 provides this guarantee of
freedom of conscience and its manifestation, it also identifies the State as the guardian of
religion, without elaborating on what that entails. Such a provision could be problematic if
this provision is interpreted as an obligation upon the State to protect religion per se, rather
than individuals.
29.
A number of existing laws that precede the adoption of Tunisia’s 2014 constitution
will need to be reconciled to further promote Tunisia’s constitutional commitment to a civil
state and equality of all citizens. These include the enforcement of public order and public
morality laws that enforce restrictions on public consumption of food during the daylight
hours of Ramadan, the month during which practising Muslims observe a daily fast;
inheritance laws that undermine guarantees of equality before the law for women; and the
criminalisation of consensual same-sex relations. Beyond the law, a number of social
pressures exist that undermine equal rights, such as in the case of persons who convert from
Islam.
V. Institutional Context and the Rule of Law
30.
Today, Tunisian state affairs are facilitated by an expanding arrangement of
institutions whose mandates include human rights—from parliamentary committees, judicial
3
4
6
The Article 6 states: «The state is the guardian of religion. It guarantees freedom of conscience and
belief, the free exercise of religious practices and the neutrality of mosques and places of worship
from all partisan instrumentalisation. »
Article 49 states: “The law shall determine the limitations related to the rights and freedoms that are
guaranteed by this Constitution as well as their exercise, on the condition that it does not compromise
their essence. These limitations can only be set where necessary in a civil democratic state, with the
aim to protect the rights of others or based on the requirements of public order, national defense,
public health or public morals. Proportionality between these limitations and their motives must be
respected. Judicial authorities shall ensure that rights and freedoms are protected from all violations.
No amendment that undermines any human rights acquisitions or freedoms guaranteed in this
Constitution is allowed”.