Controversial Tunisian Rapper Arrested in Unclear Circumstances
Anis Mrabti, a young Tunisian rapper better known by his stage name Volcanis, was arrested at his house on January 25th.
Statements made by Mrabti’s father after the incident, coupled with the political nature of Mrabti’s music, have provoked speculation about the motivations of the police action.
According to Anis’ father, Mongi Mrabti, six men in plain clothes broke into the family house, asked for Anis, arrested him, and confiscated his desktop and MP3 player. The father asked them who they were and they answered that they were police.
“They drove a tinted glass civilian car and they did not show me any arrest warrant or any police ID,” explained the father.
In an interview with Tunisia Live, Mongi Mrabti stated that the Mrabti family was not told where there son had been taken and were not informed of what he had been charged with for nearly two days, until the family received a call from a Tunisian citizen not affiliated with the police who had heard of Anis’ story and made independent investigations. The phone call apparently informed them that Anis had tested positive for drug use, and that his arrest came after others involved in the same “drug case” had given police Anis’ name.
Anis Mrabti became well known recently for his song “Matbadal Chay” (“Nothing has changed” in Tunisian Arabic), which contains sharp criticism of the current political situation in Tunisia. In the song, Mrabti criticizes the Tunisian government, accusing Tunisian politicians of running after power and speaking about the suffering of Tunisian people from bribery and social injustice. The controversial nature of the song has prompted some on social networks to speculate that Mrabti has been arrested for political reasons.
Anis’s father said some human rights organizations contacted him and told him that they will look into the allegation that Anis was arrested without warrant or due process.
The Ministry of the Interior released a statement on its official Facebook page in which they denied all rumors about the arrest being politically motivated, or having anything to do with the lyrics of Mrabti’s song.
This morning, Mongi Mrabti received a call from the police station of Wardiya, a suburb of Tunis asking him to collect his son’s desktop. He has been told that his son will be tried tomorrow in a drug case in Grombalia, in the governorate of Nabeul, the alleged crime said to have taken place in Hamamet, also in the Nabeul governorate.
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