Jawhar Ben Mbarekâs sister said his health had âseverely deterioratedâ and a âdangerous toxinâ was detected in his body.
Published On 15 Nov 202515 Nov 2025
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Jailed Tunisian opposition figure Jawhar Ben Mbarek has been hospitalised due to severe dehydration, his family has said, as his health continues to deteriorate after more than two weeks on hunger strike.
Ben Mbarek, the cofounder of Tunisiaâs main opposition alliance, the National Salvation Front, started his hunger strike on October 29 to protest his detention in jail since February 2023.
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In a Facebook post on Friday, Ben Mbarekâs sister, Dalila Ben Mbarek Msaddek, warned that her brotherâs health had now âseverely deterioratedâ and doctors detected âa highly dangerous toxinâ affecting his kidneys.
Msaddek said Ben Mbarek had âreceived treatment but refused nutritional supplementsâ at the hospital where he was transferred on Thursday night, insisting on continuing his now 17-day protest.
The politician was discharged from hospital on Friday afternoon and returned to prison, Msaddek added.
On Wednesday, Ben Mbarekâs lawyer Hanen Khmiri said he had âfaced tortureâ at the hands of guards at Belli prison, as they attempted to force him to end his protest.
âHe was severely beaten, we saw fractures and bruises on his body,â Khmiri said, adding that she had filed a complaint with the public prosecutor, who promised to investigate.
âHe told me that four of the prison guards beat him severely in a place where there is no surveillance camera,â she said.
Ben Mbarek is one of the most prominent opponents of Tunisian strongman President Kais Saied, who has been in power since 2019.
In April, he was sentenced to 18 years in prison on charges of âconspiracy against state securityâ and âbelonging to a terrorist groupâ, in a mass trial of opposition figures slammed by human rights groups as politically motivated.

Ben Mbarek has denied the charges, which he has called fabricated.
Rights groups have warned of a sharp decline in civil liberties in Tunisia since a sweeping power grab by Saied in July 2021, when he dissolved parliament and expanded executive power so he could rule by decree.
That decree was later enshrined in a new constitution, ratified by a widely boycotted 2022 referendum. Media figures and lawyers critical of Saied have also been prosecuted and detained under a harsh âfake newsâ law enacted the same year.
Last week, Ben Mbarekâs family and prominent members of Tunisiaâs political opposition announced they would join him in a collective hunger strike.
Among the participants was Issam Chebbi, the leader of the centrist Al Joumhouri (Republican) Party, who is also behind bars after being convicted in the same mass trial as Ben Mbarek earlier this year.
Rached Ghannouchi, the 84-year-old leader of the Ennahdha party, who is also serving a hefty prison sentence, also said he would join the protest. Chebbi and Ghannouchiâs current condition is not known.
Prison authorities have maintained the men are under âcontinuous medical supervisionâ and denied ârumours about the deterioration in the health of any detaineesâ.







