Tunisian President Kais Saied has extended the suspension of parliament until further notice, the presidency said in a statement, a month after freezing it in a move that opponents decried as a coup. He also extended an order lifting immunity for the country's lawmakers. Saied issued "a presidential decree extending the exceptional measures... regarding the suspension of Parliament and lifting of the parliamentary immunity of its MPs until further notice", said the statement issued late Monday. He would deliver an address to the Tunisian people in the coming days, it added, without providing further details. "It's been 10 years that (the people) have been silent and in just one month (of parliament suspension) some are disturbed. Who are these people? The corrupt and the people who plunder the country are the ones who are disturbed." Ahfaid a Tunis resident said. But for another resident identified simply as Mahmud, this is too much time. "One whole month and he (Kais Saied) has not yet appointed a prime minister. If he (Kais Saied) wants to do a good thing, then he must quickly appoint one And if he is against the parliament, then he must hold an election with a different electoral law." he stressed. Tunisia, hailed as a rare democratic success story in the Middle East and North Africa, is mired in a political crisis compounded by dire economic woes and the Covid-19 pandemic. Saied's shock intervention on July 25, in which he sacked the government and said he was suspending parliament for a month, sparked uncertainty for the North African country. He said the measures were necessary to prevent the country from collapse. Toxic fumes at a luxury four-star hotel have left 24 people in hospital. European Union to allocate USD 236-million in humanitarian aid for Afghanistan Israeli PM Naftali Bennett embarks to US for his first official meeting