Oman Daily Observer

Kais Saied elected Tunisia president

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TUNIS: Tunisia’s electoral commission was expected to confirm that voters gave conservati­ve political outsider Kais Saied a sweeping mandate to be the next president, thanks largely to young people who flocked to his side.

In a contest that reflected Tunisia’s shifting post-revolution political landscape, Saied, an independen­t, scooped up more than 70 per cent of the vote, polls showed sweeping aside his rival, charismati­c media magnate Nabil Karoui.

“He was elected comfortabl­y,” political Selim Kharrat said.

With his three million estimated votes, Saied won double that of all 217 lawmakers combined who were elected in October 6 general elections.

This win very scientist “is a message to parliament,” Kharrat added. “Voters have opted for a plan to clean up politics, fight corruption, and give more power to local entities.”

Saied, a retired law professor with a rigid and austere demeanour that earned him the nickname “Robocop”, was carried to victory by young voters, wooed by his antiestabl­ishment platform.

Around 90 per cent of 18- to 25-year-olds voted for Saied, according to estimates by the Sigma polling institute, compared with 49.2 per cent of voters over 60.

In his first reaction, Saied thanked the country’s young people “for turning a new page”, and vowed to try to build “a new Tunisia”.

Thousands of people took to the streets of the capital Tunis on late Sunday to celebrate Saied’s victory, honking horns and singing the national anthem.

 ?? — AFP ?? Conservati­ve academic Kais Saied, flanked by his wife Ichraf Chebil, celebrates his victory in the Tunisian presidenti­al election in the capital Tunis.
— AFP Conservati­ve academic Kais Saied, flanked by his wife Ichraf Chebil, celebrates his victory in the Tunisian presidenti­al election in the capital Tunis.

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