Celebration and protests mark Tunisia's new Revolution Day
Opponents and supporters of Tunisia's leader held rival demonstrations on the new date President Kais Saied chose to mark the country's Revolution Day

Official observances took place at the birthplace of Tunisia s 2011 revolution, while opponents and supporters of the country's president held rival demonstrations in the capital Friday, the new date the leader chose to mark Revolution Day.
A few hundred demonstrators gathered in Tunis on Friday morning to protest Tunisian President Kais Saiedās consolidation of power over the summer and his subsequent actions that have raised fears of democratic backsliding.
A smaller counter-protest in support of the president was held nearby.
Saied announced Monday, almost five months after his power grab, that he would prolong the suspension of parliament until an election in December next year. He also set a date for a national referendum on political reform for July 25, exactly a year since Saied took on sweeping powers.
The president's opponents slammed his announcement.
Former parliament speaker Rached Ghannouchi, the leader of Tunisiaās largest Islamist party, Ennahdha, called Saiedās moves āunconstitutional and illegalā and said the president had ādeepened the political crisis in the countryā¦and exacerbated Tunisiaās international isolation."
The secretary-general of the countryās main trade union, the UGTT, said Saied's announcement did not address the countryās economic and social problems. The coronavirus pandemic exacerbated Tunisia's deteriorating economy, and the country has an 18% unemployment rate.
Following nationwide antigovernment protests in July, Saied abruptly froze parliament, dismissed his government and assumed greater executive powers. In September, he partially suspended the countryās post-revolutionary Constitution and gave himself the power to rule by decree.
Though Saied's measures have proven popular, welcomed by a public weary of political elites and economic turmoil, critics say Saiedās actions amount to a coup.
Among Saiedās recent announcements was his decision to move the countryās official Revolution Day from Jan. 14 ā commemorating the date when former autocrat Zine el Abidine Ben Ali fled the country amid unprecedented mass protests ā to Dec. 17.
The new date marks the day in 2010 when fruit seller Mohammed Bouazizi set himself on fire in frustration over corruption, joblessness and repression. His desperate act set off an uprising across Tunisia that spread to other countries in what became known as the Arab Spring.
In the decade since, an annual celebration has always been held on Dec. 17 in Sidi Bouzid, Bouaziziās hometown and the site of the revolutionās first protests.