The journey of resistance

مسيرة النضال

Key milestones and important dates in Ayachi Hammami's activism and legal career.

المحطات الرئيسية والتواريخ المهمة في نشاطه والمسيرة القانونية.

Early activism and commitment to social justice
Ayachi Hammami became politically active in the late 1970s through union activism while working as a school teacher. His early engagement in social and political struggles led to his dismissal from the education system, marking the beginning of a life shaped by political reprisals. Rather than retreating, he chose to pursue law as a means to defend the oppressed and confront injustice through legal struggle. He became a lawyer in the mid-1990s and quickly established himself as an independent figure, unaffiliated with any political party.

A lawyer under dictatorship
Throughout the Ben Ali dictatorship, Ayachi Hammami dedicated his legal practice almost entirely to defending victims of human rights violations, political prisoners, trade unionists, journalists, and activists. He played an active role within the Tunisian Bar Association and was deeply involved in human rights organizations at both national and regional levels. He served as Secretary General of a regional section of the Tunisian League for the Defence of Human Rights (LTDH), later becoming a member of its executive committee, as well as the executive committee of Euromed Rights.
His commitment came at a heavy personal cost. Hammami was subjected to constant surveillance, intimidation, and harassment. His home and law office were closely monitored, and in 2007 his office was deliberately set on fire. Many of his clients were pressured by the police to abandon him, forcing him to carry out most of his human rights work without remuneration and at the expense of his professional livelihood.

Key moments of resistance
In April 2005, following the arrest of lawyer and political dissident Mohamed Abbou, Ayachi Hammami initiated a sit-in by lawyers at the headquarters of the Tunisian Bar Association. The protest lasted nearly two months and became one of the most visible acts of professional resistance under the dictatorship.
Later that same year, as Tunisia prepared to host the World Summit on the Information Society, Hammami opened his law office to seven activists who undertook a month-long hunger strike. This action attracted national and international attention and led to the creation of the October 18 Coalition for Rights and Freedoms, an unprecedented alliance uniting diverse political currents around shared demands: the release of political prisoners, freedom of expression, freedom of association and assembly, and press freedom. This coalition played a historic role in challenging the regime and foreshadowed alliances that would emerge after the 2011 revolution.
In 2008, during the Gafsa mining basin uprising, Hammami was again on the front line, defending arrested trade unionists and activists in a context of severe repression.

After the 2011 revolution: reform and vigilance
Following the Tunisian revolution of 2011, Ayachi Hammami took part in the transitional process while remaining independent from political power. He was appointed a member of the Higher Authority for the Realisation of the Objectives of the Revolution, Political Reform, and Democratic Transition. In this capacity, he contributed to drafting Decree 88 on associations, a cornerstone of post-revolutionary Tunisia that enabled the flourishing of civil society.
Hammami consistently advocated for accountability for crimes committed under previous regimes and defended the transitional justice process against political attempts to undermine victims’ rights to truth, justice, and reparations. In 2019, he was nominated by four parliamentary groups for membership in the Constitutional Court, which was never established.
In 2020, he briefly served as Minister of Human Rights. During his tenure, he worked to advance transitional justice, including supporting the publication of the Truth and Dignity Commission’s final report in the Official Journal of the Tunisian Republic.

Resistance to authoritarian rollback after 2021
After President Kais Saied’s seizure of power on 25 July 2021, Ayachi Hammami emerged as one of the most prominent legal voices opposing the dismantling of democratic institutions. He publicly denounced the concentration of powers in the hands of the executive, warned against the erosion of the rule of law, and consistently defended judicial independence.
In June 2022, following a presidential decree allowing the dismissal of judges without due process, Hammami coordinated and acted as spokesperson for the defence committee of 57 arbitrarily dismissed judges and prosecutors. The committee sought legal remedies, denounced violations of judicial independence, and exposed the instrumentalization of the judiciary.
In the same context of repression, Hammami founded the National Committee for the Defence of Freedoms and Democracy (NCDFD) in 2022. The organization documents human rights violations, defends victims of political persecution, supports judges, and advocates for the restoration of democratic governance and separation of powers.

Criminalization of legal defense and the “conspiracy case”
In January 2023, Ayachi Hammami was charged under Decree-Law 54 following statements made during a radio interview in his capacity as a defense lawyer. The investigation, initiated by the Ministry of Justice, remained open for months.
In May 2023, he was added as a suspect in the high-profile “conspiracy against the state” case, in which he had initially served as a defense lawyer for detained opposition figures. He was later charged with “joining a terrorist organization” and “failing to report terrorist activity,” accusations widely regarded as politically motivated and unsupported by material evidence.
Throughout the proceedings, Hammami denounced the case as a political trial and refused to legitimize what he described as a judicial charade. He was placed under a travel ban and restrictions on appearing in public spaces. The trial was marked by grave violations of fair trial rights, including the use of remote hearings for detained defendants and the absence of defense pleadings.
On 19 April 2025, Ayachi Hammami was convicted and sentenced to prison. The verdict was upheld on appeal in November 2025, despite widespread condemnation by Tunisian and international human rights organizations, UN experts, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, who described the proceedings as a sham.


Arrest and imprisonment
On 2 December 2025, security forces arrested Ayachi Hammami at his home to enforce the sentence, after days of intense surveillance. His detention marks a turning point in Tunisia’s repression of lawyers and human rights defenders, symbolizing the criminalization of legal defense and peaceful dissent.