Mokhtar Yahyaoui


Mokhtar Yahyaoui was a human rights activist and a Tunisian judge. He was opposed to the system of former Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. Yahyaoui was born on June 1, 1952 in the village of Ksar Hadada in southern Tunisia, and died in September 22, 2015 in Teskrayah in the village of Ghazaleh from the region of Bizerte.
He was isolated in 2001 from the judiciary and confiscated his property, after sending a message to President Ben Ali criticizing the Tunisian judiciary mode. After the Tunisian revolution, the Administrative Court overturned, on March 23, 2011, the judgement against him in 2001. Following the court decision, he returned to the legal profession.

Activities

Following the Tunisian revolution, Yahyaoui became as a national figure a member of the Higher Authority for Realisation of the Objectives of the Revolution, Political Reform and Democratic Transition in 2011. Then he was appointed in February 2012, Chairman of the National Commission for the Protection of Personal Data.

Personal life

Judge Yahyaoui has a daughter Amira Yahyaoui, she is an activist and the founder of the watchdog NGO Al Bawsala. His nephew is the famous blogger Zouhair Yahyaoui, the founder of a satirical website TUNeZINE, he is the first cyber-dissident who died as a result of torture in 2005.

His death

Yahyaoui died according to a preliminary medical report cardiac arrest on September 22, 2015 in Teskrayah in the village of Ghazaleh from the region of Bizerte. He was transferred to the regional hospital Al Habib Boktefh in Bizerte and then to the Charles Nicolle Hospital in Tunis.
He was buried on September 23. Most of Tunisian political faces attended his funeral, including the former President of the Republic of Tunisia Moncef Marzouki, the former head of government Ali Laarayedh, the current Minister of Employment Zied Ladhari and the current Minister of communication technologies and the digital economy Noomane Fehri as well, and the President of the Bar Abderrazak Kilani, as well to the former Minister Samir Dilou, Abdul Wahab Matar, Abdellatif Mekki and Rafik Abdessalem, as well as politicians Rached Ghannouchi, Ahmed Mestiri, Hamma Hammami, Iyed Dahmani, Adnan Mansar, Issam Chebbi, Mohamed Abbou, Abderraouf Ayadi and Mahmoud Baroudi.

Judges in all courts and judicial institutions and the Department of Accounting in Tunisia stopped for a minute of silence before the start of the sessions in memory of the spirit of Judge Mokhtar Yahyaoui, and according to what the Association of Tunisian Judges said that this stance is a touch of fulfillment for the judge Mokhtar Yahyaoui and for the struggle he went through before the Tunisian revolution for independence of the judiciary and defeat corruption.

Honors and awards