• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact
webdo
FR AR EN
  • Home
  • National
  • international
  • Regions
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Others
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • National
  • international
  • Regions
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Others
No Result
View All Result
🇫🇷 FR 🇸🇦 AR 🇬🇧 EN
webdo
No Result
View All Result
Home National

Parliament advances towards the end of subcontracting

by Webdo
Tuesday 20 May 2025 20:17
in National

The Assembly of People’s Representatives (ARP) is preparing to adopt a bill, described as “legislative revolution” by a majority of deputies, which rebatts the labor market cards in Tunisia. In line of sight: the pure and simple prohibition of subcontracting and the almost generalized taxation of the indefinite contract (CDI). Carried by an enthusiastic majority, the reform nevertheless arouses concerns in certain sectors, in particular that of guarding.

A bill unanimously praised … or almost

In the hemicycle, deputies are not praised on this text presented as a “legislative revolution”. For many elected officials, this is an expected response to the precarious work and the exploitation of contractual agents, in particular in public institutions. The CDI, imposed by default with a strictly framed trial period, is seen as a lever for stability and dignity for workers.

The ban on subcontracting is also at the heart of the text. It will concern all sectors, including those long used to outsourcing so -called “auxiliary” functions: cleaning, guarding, maintenance. Several deputies see it as the end of an opaque system of cascade contracts, often not very protective for workers.

While the plenary debates seem to be settled-almost all of the deputies who have displayed their support-a question remains unanswered: is the vote already acquired, or is there a space for dispute and revision? Because if the intention to protect workers is beneficial, the concrete consequences of the text are not unanimous.

As the reform takes shape, criticisms emerge. Nacer Yatouji, member of the Syndicale Chamber of Security Companies, does not mince his words: this law, he says, amounts to “condemning to death” a structured and regulated sector. According to him, the amalgam made between informal subcontracting and specialized companies throws stigma on structures supervised by the State, subject to authorization and permanent control of the Ministry of the Interior.

Guarding, which brings together some 200 companies according to its estimates, is not a provider of interchangeable labor, but an integrated service provider, with training and supervision. The absence of an economic and social impact study fuels the reservations: what fate for these companies? What about their employees?

The legislative precipitation in question

A deputy proposed the dismissal of the text in commission for adjustments, recalling that any major reform deserves a minimum of visibility on its concrete effects. How many workers are concerned? What alternatives for the structures that subcontract today? The vagueness persists.

If the objectives displayed – social justice, stability of employment – consensus, the methods of application of the project worry by their radicality. Does Tunisia have the means of such a brutal transformation? Without support, this reform could further weaken an economic fabric already under tension.

Next Post

Strike canceled at La Transu

Most recent

A Chopin concert in Sousse

by Webdo
23 November 2025

The JTC opens its 26th edition: A Tunisian scene focused on the streets and the resistance

by Webdo
23 November 2025

Ligue 1 – 15th day: Prestigious duel in Sousse

by Webdo
23 November 2025

Cooperation: Djerba and Nice get in tune with sustainable tourism

by Webdo
23 November 2025

Most viewed (72h)

Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS

Your Tunis electronic newspaper. Follow all the latest news in Tunisia in real time: politics, society, culture, economy, and more. Webdo, a reliable and independent source at the heart of the news.

Follow us

MENU

  • Home
  • National
  • international
  • Regions
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Others

TAGS

Actor Actress Afef Ben Mahmoud American Cinema Arab cinema Arab Cinema Center Arab Critics’ Awards for European Films Cairo Classics Cairo International Film Festival Cannes 2024 Cannes Film Festival Carthage Film Festival CIFF CIFF 2025 cinema Claudia Cardinale Egyptian Actor Egyptian Cinema El Gouna El Gouna 2025 El Gouna Film Festival Festival Film FIPRESCI Gaza Golden Eve Golden Globes Golden Globes 2026 Golden Globes Awards International Conference JCC JCC 2025 Kais Saied Kaouther Ben Hania Khaled El Nabawy Law Mohammad Rasoulof Neïla Driss Palestine Palestinian Cinema Red Sea International Film Festival short films The Voice Of Hind Rajab Tunisia Tunisian cinema

Logo Webdo
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • National
  • international
  • Regions
  • Sport
  • Culture
  • Others