Tunisia Defamation Laws: Civil, Criminal & Defences

In Tunisia, defamation is both a civil wrong and a criminal offence, and several overlapping laws apply to the same conduct. The Penal Code (Code penal) punishes defamation and slander with prison and fines, the 2011 Press Decree (Decree-Law 2011-115) governs press defamation through fines, and the 2022 cybercrime law (Decree-Law 54) adds heavy prison terms for spreading false information online.
Is defamation civil, criminal, or both in Tunisia?
It is both, and the same statement can fall under more than one law. Criminal defamation lives in the Penal Code, where Article 245 defines defamation as any allegation or public imputation of a fact that harms the honour or consideration of a person or an official body. The 2011 Press Decree (Decree-Law 2011-115), adopted after the 2011 transition, was meant to govern press offences and replaced imprisonment for press defamation with fines. Since 2022, Decree-Law 54 on offences relating to information and communication systems has added severe prison terms for spreading false information online. On the civil side, a person harmed by a defamatory statement can sue for damages under the general tort rules of the Code of Obligations and Contracts. Human-rights monitors note that prosecutors frequently rely on the Penal Code and Decree-Law 54 rather than the more protective Press Decree.
What counts as criminal defamation under the Penal Code?
The Penal Code separates defamation from slander. Article 245 defines defamation as the public allegation or imputation of a fact that damages the honour or consideration of a person or a body, and Article 246 addresses slander, which arises where the defamatory facts are judicially declared unestablished. Under Article 247, a person guilty of defamation faces up to six months in prison and a fine of 240 dinars, while a person guilty of slander faces up to one year and a fine of 720 dinars. Article 248 sets heavier penalties, two to five years and a fine, for false denunciations against administrative or judicial officials. These provisions apply broadly, including to statements about public institutions, which is one reason they have been used against journalists and commentators.

Watch out: Tunisian law overlaps. The same online post can be charged under the Penal Code, the Press Decree, or Decree-Law 54, and prosecutors have tended to choose the law with the harshest penalty.
What does the 2011 Press Decree do?
Decree-Law 2011-115 was adopted to protect press freedom after the fall of the prior regime. It abolished licensing for print media, protected journalists' sources, and, importantly for defamation, removed prison as a penalty for press offences, substituting fines. In principle, defamation committed through the press should be prosecuted under this Decree rather than the Penal Code, and should therefore result in a fine rather than imprisonment. In practice, monitors report that authorities often bypass the Press Decree and charge journalists under the Penal Code, which still allows prison, or under Decree-Law 54. The Press Decree remains the governing framework for the press, but its protective effect depends on which law prosecutors choose to invoke.
What is Decree-Law 54 of 2022?
Decree-Law 54, issued in September 2022, criminalises offences relating to information and communication systems. Its most contested provision, Article 24, punishes a person who knowingly uses communication networks to produce, spread, or disseminate false news, false data, rumours, or falsified documents in order to harm the rights of others, harm public safety or national defence, or spread terror, with five years in prison and a fine of 50,000 dinars. The penalty doubles to ten years where the target is a public official. Because the offence turns on broadly defined false information and applies to ordinary social-media posts, press-freedom organisations have documented its use against journalists, lawyers, and online critics, and it has become a leading basis for criminal cases over online speech.
| Provision | Conduct | Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Penal Code Art. 247 (defamation) | Defaming a person or public body | Up to 6 months and 240-dinar fine |
| Penal Code Art. 247 (slander) | Slander (facts judicially unestablished) | Up to 1 year and 720-dinar fine |
| Penal Code Art. 248 | False denunciation of officials | 2 to 5 years and fine |
| Decree-Law 54 Art. 24 | Spreading false news or rumours online | 5 years and 50,000-dinar fine |
| Decree-Law 54 Art. 24 (official target) | False news targeting a public official | 10 years and fine |
How does civil liability work, and what defences apply?
A person harmed by a defamatory statement can pursue civil compensation under the general civil-liability rules of the Code of Obligations and Contracts, which require fault, harm, and a causal link. As to defences, ordinary defamation under the Penal Code can be answered by proof that the imputed fact is true where the law permits such proof, and by good faith, meaning an honest statement made for a legitimate purpose without intent to harm. The slander provisions turn precisely on whether the defamatory facts can be established. Decree-Law 54, by contrast, targets false information, so the truth of a statement is central to whether the offence is made out, though commentators have warned that the law's vague terms make the boundary uncertain. Fair reporting of public matters and a person's right of reply are recognised features of the press framework.

What is the limitation period?
Press offences are subject to short limitation periods under the press framework, so a press-defamation complaint must be brought soon after publication. Ordinary Penal Code prosecutions and civil claims follow the general limitation rules applicable to those actions, which give more time than the press-offence window. Because a single statement can be pursued under different laws with different deadlines, the applicable time limit depends on which legal basis is used. A person who believes they have been defamed, and a person who fears prosecution over a publication, should both treat the press-offence deadlines as the shortest and most pressing.
How is online defamation treated?
Online speech is squarely covered. Decree-Law 54 is aimed specifically at content distributed through communication networks, and its Article 24 has been applied to Facebook posts, articles, and other online statements. The Penal Code defamation provisions also reach online content, since they turn on public imputation of damaging facts regardless of medium. As a result, a defamatory or allegedly false online post can expose the author to the Penal Code's prison-and-fine defamation penalties or to Decree-Law 54's much heavier terms. Monitors have recorded a marked increase in the detention and prosecution of journalists and online critics under Decree-Law 54 since 2022.
How do you bring a defamation claim in Tunisia?
A person targeted by defamation can file a complaint with the public prosecutor, who may pursue the matter under the Penal Code, the Press Decree, or Decree-Law 54 depending on the medium and content, before the criminal courts. Separately, the person can bring a civil action for damages under the Code of Obligations and Contracts before the civil courts, seeking compensation and corrective measures. Because the criminal regimes carry very different penalties, with Decree-Law 54 by far the most severe, the route chosen has significant consequences. This is general information about Tunisian law, not legal advice for any specific dispute.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Tunisia?
Yes. The Penal Code criminalises defamation under Articles 245 to 248, with Article 247 setting up to six months in prison and a fine for defaming a person or public body. The 2022 cybercrime law (Decree-Law 54) adds far heavier prison terms for spreading false news online.
What is Decree-Law 54 in Tunisia?
Decree-Law 54 of 2022 is a cybercrime law. Its Article 24 punishes producing or spreading false news, rumours, or falsified documents through communication networks with five years in prison and a 50,000-dinar fine, doubling to ten years where the target is a public official.
What are the penalties for defamation in Tunisia?
Penal Code Article 247 sets up to six months and a 240-dinar fine for defamation and up to one year and a 720-dinar fine for slander. Article 248 punishes false denunciation of officials with two to five years. Decree-Law 54 imposes five years (ten for officials) for online false news.
Did the 2011 Press Decree abolish prison for defamation?
For press offences, yes. Decree-Law 2011-115 replaced imprisonment for press defamation with fines. In practice, though, authorities have frequently charged journalists under the Penal Code or Decree-Law 54 instead, both of which allow imprisonment.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Tunisia?
For ordinary Penal Code defamation, proof that the imputed fact is true can be a defence where the law allows it, and good faith is recognised. The slander provisions turn on whether the facts can be established, and Decree-Law 54 centres on whether the information is false.
How is online defamation handled in Tunisia?
Online defamation can be charged under the Penal Code or, more severely, under Decree-Law 54, which targets false information spread through communication networks. The latter has driven a sharp rise in prosecutions of journalists and online critics since 2022.
Can you sue for defamation in Tunisia?
Yes. Beyond the criminal routes, a person harmed by a defamatory statement can bring a civil claim for damages under the general tort rules of the Code of Obligations and Contracts, which require fault, harm, and a causal link.
Which law applies if the same statement breaks several rules?
Tunisian law overlaps, so a single statement can fall under the Penal Code, the 2011 Press Decree, and Decree-Law 54. Prosecutors choose the basis, and monitors report a tendency to rely on the harsher Penal Code or Decree-Law 54 rather than the fine-only Press Decree.
Sources and References
- International Center for Not-for-Profit Law, Tunisia Penal Code excerpts (Articles 245 to 248 on defamation and slander)(icnl.org)
- ARTICLE 19, Analysis of Tunisia Decree-Law No. 54 of 2022 (Article 24)(article19.org)
- Committee to Protect Journalists, Tunisia uses cybercrime law to jail journalists(cpj.org)
- Human Rights Watch, Tunisia: Cybercrime Decree Used Against Critics(hrw.org)
- International Commission of Jurists, Tunisia: Repeal Draconian Cybercrime Decree(icj.org)
- Media Ownership Monitor Tunisia, legal context (Decree-Law 2011-115 and Penal Code)(mom-gmr.org)