Arab News

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TUNIS: Tunisia’s Prime Minister Youssef Chahed has called on citizens to “join hands” to defeat both terrorism and the economic obstacles threatenin­g the country’s budding democracy.

Chahed announced before lawmakers on Monday a battery of ambitious reforms aimed at pulling Tunisia out of its economic crisis by 2020.

Chahed says until then he will lead “a government of war against terrorism and corruption, a government that works for developmen­t and fights unemployme­nt” and helps to erase disparitie­s between the capital and the country’s inland regions.

To do so, he told Tunisians that they must “join hands” and make “shared sacrifices.”

Chahed, the youngest premier in the country’s post-independen­ce history, said he wanted to raise the retirement age and increase the social charges Tunisians contribute to their benefits.

President Beji Caid Essebsi has also strengthen­ed his grip on power with Parliament approving a Cabinet reshuffle ahead of key elections.

Chahed said his new Cabinet would respect the “national unity” needed to pass much-needed reforms.

Observers say the new Cabinet, which places Essebsi allies in key positions, consolidat­es the 90-year-old president’s hold on the executive, months ahead of Tunisia’s first post-revolution municipal polls.

“It is the president who pulls the strings,” French language daily Le Quotidien said.

The premier easily won a confidence vote for his new line-up, backed by lawmakers from his own Nidaa Tounes party and its ally in government, Ennahdha, which together dominate Parliament.

He announced the new line-up last week after talks with Essebsi, who founded secular Nidaa Tunes and later became prime minister before being elected president in the wake of a revolution in 2011.

The prime minister played up his government’s economic achievemen­ts and said he had appointed new interior and defense ministers “to strengthen our country’s capacities in the fight against terrorism, organized crime and smuggling.”

But observers say the new team consolidat­es the clout of Essebsi’s Nidaa Tounes.

 ??  ?? Tunisian Prime Minister Youssef Chahed arrives in Parliament on Monday with Speaker Mohamed Ennaceur before of a vote of confidence in his reshuffled government in Tunis. (AP)
Tunisian Prime Minister Youssef Chahed arrives in Parliament on Monday with Speaker Mohamed Ennaceur before of a vote of confidence in his reshuffled government in Tunis. (AP)

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