What information can be accessed?
Any recorded information, regardless of its date or form (written, audio, or visual), and regardless of its medium (paper or electronic), produced or held by entities subject to the Organic Law on the right of access to information, within the scope of their activities.
How can information be accessed?
Access is granted either by consulting the concerned entity’s website when information is published proactively, or by submitting an access-to-information request when the requested information is not published.
What penalties protect this right?
A fine from five hundred (500) dinars to five thousand (5000) dinars applies to anyone who intentionally obstructs access to information. One year of imprisonment and a fine of one hundred and twenty (120) dinars apply to anyone who unlawfully destroys information or incites another person to do so.
What formats are available for access?
When submitting a request, the applicant must specify the desired format:
The request may be submitted:
Which entities are subject to the law?
Are there any fees for access?
Access is free of charge. However, if providing the information involves costs, the applicant is informed in advance of the need to pay a fee that does not exceed the actual costs incurred by the concerned entity. Cases where access is subject to payment must be defined by law. If there is no legal basis, no payment may be requested. When the law requires payment, proof of payment must be provided before obtaining the information.
How can a refusal be challenged and appealed?
The applicant may file a complaint to the head of the concerned entity within twenty (20) days following notification. The head of the entity responds within a maximum of ten (10) days from the date of submission. Failure to respond is considered an implicit refusal. In case of explicit or implicit refusal, the applicant may appeal to the Access to Information Authority within twenty (20) days.
What is the role of the Access to Information Officer?
The Access to Information Officer is a key actor in implementing Organic Law No. 22 of 2016. The officer is appointed by the head of the concerned entity, along with a deputy, by an official decision. Key responsibilities include:
What are the response deadlines?
The concerned entity must respond within a maximum of twenty (20) days from receipt or correction of the request. For on-site consultation, the deadline is ten (10) days. In case of refusal, the decision must be written, justified, and must include appeal methods and deadlines in accordance with the law.
In all cases, failure to respond within legal deadlines constitutes an implicit refusal.
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Brief overview of historical sites with references
Built in 1828 with the authorization of Minister Chaker Sahib At-Tabaa. During the reign of Marshal Ahmed Pasha Bey I, it was granted to Amir Al-Liwaa Hassan El Maqrone of Msaken. During the 1864 uprising, the palace hosted negotiations between the rebels and the envoys of Sadok Bey.
The first mosque established in the town by the founders of Msaken in the late first half of the 8th Hijri century (14th century AD). It is located between the five palaces forming the historic core of the city.
The city of Msaken includes more than fifteen zaouias belonging to the Slimiya, Qadiriya, Shadhiliya and Aissaouiya orders, such as Sidi El Hadhiri, Sidi Omar Ech-Cheti, Sidi Abbar, Sidi El Kaibi, Sidi El Melih and Sidi Abdel Salam in the old souk.
Currently known as the Zaouia of Sidi Ali Az-Zarli, the building is threatened with collapse. It is located near Sarayet El Maqrone and is believed to have been founded in the early 12th Hijri century.
Known as the Zaouia of Sidi Ali Ben Khalifa, it was founded in 1104 AH (1692 AD). Many scholars graduated from this institution.
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