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Tunisia jails tycoon Mabrouk and ex-PM Chahed
Photo: Getty Images

(This March 3 story has been corrected to show that Chahed and other ministers were not sentenced for their handling of the corruption case, but for their handling of a separate case related to Mabrouk's frozen funds in Europe)
A Tunisian court on Tuesday ‌jailed the country's richest businessman, Marouan Mabrouk, for corruption while giving prison terms to a former prime minister and several other former cabinet members over the handling of a separate case related to Mabrouk's frozen ​funds in Europe, News.Az reports, citing Reuters.

Mabrouk, a son-in-law of Tunisia's former President Zine El Abidine Ben ​Ali, who was ousted in 2011, has been held in prison since late ⁠2023.

Mabrouk is part of an influential family with business interests in trade, banking, communications and ​car dealerships. Mabrouk also controls a major supermarket chain and owns shares in BIAT Bank, ​French telecoms operator Orange and a biscuit company.

He is one of Ben Ali's few relatives who did not flee Tunisia after a revolution in 2011 that toppled Ben Ali.

Mabrouk, however, has faced criticism that he ​received support and protection from successive governments after 2011.

Mabrouk was charged with money laundering and stealing ​funds from state companies.

Former Prime Minister Youssef Chahed received a judgement for his government's lifting of an asset ‌freeze ⁠imposed on Mabrouk.
Chahed, along with the former foreign minister, finance minister, human rights minister and information and communication technologies minister, were each sentenced to six years in prison and a fine of $800 million.

Chahed, who served as prime minister from 2016 to 2020, is in the ​United States and his ​sentence was issued ⁠in absentia. Chahed denied any wrongdoing, saying the charges were politically motivated.

President Kais Saied, who seized control of the government and dissolved parliament ​in 2021 in a move that the opposition described as a ​coup, created ⁠a committee in 2022 to collect money from business owners allegedly involved in financial corruption cases, to reduce Tunisia's budget deficit.

Saied had said that these business owners must pay and that the ⁠state ​would not give up what is owed to it.
He ​said the state would collect no less than $5 billion. However, after several years, the reconciliation committee has not announced ​any amounts had been received.


News.Az 

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