Ruling Islamists Split over Deepening Tunisia Crisis

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Tunisia's ruling Islamists Thursday rejected plans by the prime minister to form a government of technocrats while the main trade union called a general strike amid renewed unrest, deepening a crisis sparked by the killing of an opposition leader.

With tensions running high since the murder Wednesday of a leftist opposition leader, Chokri Belaid, clashes between police and protesters broke out in the capital and in a central town, AFP correspondents said.

Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali, who hails from the ruling Ennahda party, said in a televised address in the wake of public outrage at Belaid's killing that he would form a new administration of non-political technocrats.

Jebali, who is expected to remain in his post, did not specify that he was dissolving the existing government, nor did he set a date for the reshuffle which must be confirmed by the national assembly.

But Ennadha's parliamentary leader, Sahbi Atig, said his bloc of MPs rejected the plans, laying bare deep divisions within the Islamist party.

"We have rejected this proposal... The head of the government took the decision without consulting the (ruling) coalition or the Ennahda movement," he said on national television.

Top Ennahda official Abdelhamid Jelassi also criticized Jebali's decision.

"As far as we are concerned, our country still needs a government coalition based on the results of the elections on October 23, 2011" that Ennahda won, said Jelassi.

The split in the ranks of the Islamists did nothing to calm tensions a day after violence erupted across the country in which one policeman was killed and Ennahda offices were torched and ransacked in a number of towns.

In the capital, police fired tear gas at demonstrators who staged a march despite a huge deployment of security forces in Habib Bourguiba Avenue, epicenter of the 2011 uprising that toppled dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and where thousands had gathered Wednesday in scenes reminiscent of the revolt.

Clashes also erupted in the volatile central mining region of Gafsa where correspondents said protesters lobbed petrol bombs at police who responded with volleys of tear gas.

Fuelling fears that Belaid's assassination will further stoke political and social discontent that has been rising in recent months, Tunisia's most powerful trade union called a general strike for Friday.

Tens of thousands of members are expected to take to the streets to coincide with the burial of Belaid after Friday prayers in the Muslim country, whose long-established secular tradition has recently been countered by the rise of one of the region's most powerful Islamist parties.

Hundreds of people gathered outside Belaid's home on Thursday near the spot where a lone, hooded gunman shot him dead as he left for work the previous morning.

Tunisian lawyers, judges and some teachers started a strike on Thursday.

Courtrooms stood empty at the main courthouse building in Tunis while lawyers in robes sang the national anthem in the hall.

Ennahda has been squarely accused by Belaid's family of being behind the killing -- charges it has vigorously denied.

Four opposition groups including Belaid's Popular Front bloc said they were pulling out of the National Constituent Assembly (NCA), elected in October 2011 but which has failed to draft a new constitution.

Comments 2
Thumb beecause 07 February 2013, 16:09

LOL.... how about kharab 3arabi!!

Thumb chrisrushlau 07 February 2013, 18:22

Democracy eats bullets for breakfast.