Gathered Tuesday at Bardo, former employees of the National Anti-Corruption Authority (INLUCC) explained to the President of the Assembly, Ibrahim Bouderbala, the precariousness in which they have found themselves since the closure of the Authority in 2021. They are demanding their reintegration into the public service and the resumption of their social rights.
Since the dissolution of the INLUCC, many of its former executives and employees say they have been left to their own devices. Without salary or social security coverage, they claim to have not benefited from any redeployment measures within the administration. It is in this context that a delegation of representatives went to the headquarters of Parliament on Tuesday to plead their case to the President of the Assembly of People’s Representatives, Ibrahim Bouderbala.
The latter said he understood their grievances and recognized that their situation was the result of “ineffective choices” contrary, according to him, to the very principles of the fight against corruption. He reiterated Parliament’s commitment to working in favor of the social role of the State and to seeking lasting solutions to this issue.
A closure still controversial
The dissolution of the INLUCC in 2021, decided by the authorities in the wake of the exceptional measures of July 25, sparked strong reactions in political and associative circles.
Several observers saw this as a weakening of institutional mechanisms to fight corruption, in a context where transparency and public governance remained national priorities.
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