Toronto Star

Tunisian capital elects first female mayor

Souad Abderrahim the only winner so far from Ennahdha party Souad Abderrahim, 54, was elected as mayor of the Tunisian capital, Tunis, on Tuesday.

- BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA

A woman from Tunisia’s moderate Islamic party was elected on Tuesday as mayor of the capital city, the first time a woman holds the post.

Souad Abderrahim, a 54-yearold pharmacist of the Ennahdha party, won the post in the second round of voting by the Tunis municipal council.

She defeated her top rival, Kamel Idir, of the party Nida Tounes, founded by the Tunisian president.

Abderrahim, a former lawmaker and militant for women’s rights, doesn’t wear a veil. She was the only winner so far among a half-dozen women from the Ennahdha party who competed for mayoral posts in the region around Tunis.

Tunisia’s municipal elections were held May 6, but newly elected municipal councils are only now voting for mayors.

In 2016, Ennahdha declared that it was separating politics from religion, stepping away from the notion of political Islam typically embodied by Islamic parties.

Abderrahim said in an interview with The Associated Press during campaignin­g that cleaning up the capital and planting trees would be her first priority.

She also said that the female candidates put forth by her party constitute a “message aimed at reassuring the women of my country” that advances made by women in the North African nation would not be compromise­d by her party.

Tunisia has been the most advanced among Arab nations regarding women’s rights since gaining independen­ce from France in 1956, with its first president, Habib Bourguiba, enshrining some principles of equality between men and women in the constituti­on.

Presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections are set for 2019.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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