Arab Times

Tunisia Islamists to give up key ministries

Plan to speed up new govt formation

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TUNIS, Feb 27, (AFP): Tunisia’s ruling Islamists said Wednesday they have agreed to give up key ministries to independen­ts, a concession that could speed up the formation of a new government and end a political crisis.

“We confirm the ‘neutralist­ion’ of the four sovereign ministries,” Ennahda party leader Rached Ghannouchi said on Radio Kalima, referring to the interior, justice, foreign and defence portfolios.

It appeared to be a significan­t backdown from the powerful politician who had previously declared that Ennahda would “never give up power” which it secured through “the legitimacy of the ballot”.

Ennahda has controlled the interior, justice and foreign ministries since Tunisia held its first free elections in October 2011, nine months after strongman Zine el Abidine Ben Ali was ousted in an uprising that sparked the Arab Spring.

The defence portfolio is already in the hands of an independen­t, Abdelkarim Zbidi, who has held the post since the revolution.

Ghannouchi said a new government could now be formed “at the end of the week”.

“We see that it is in the interests of the Tunisian government, in the transition­al period and for the period to come, to bring together Islamists and secularist­s... even though we are the majority,” he said.

Ennahda was responding to a demand by almost all of the opposition and the government’s two secular, centre-left partners, Ettakatol and the Congress for the Republic of President Moncef Marzouki.

Ghannouchi has said the new cabinet would be made up of “five or six parties,” and suggested the Wafa movement, the Freedom and Dignity bloc and the Democratic Alliance as potential partners.

But Ettakatol spokesman Mohamed Bennour said his latest concession did not mean a positive compromise had been reached.

“There is an agreement that department­s are entrusted to independen­ts, but not the names of the ministers,” he told AFP, adding talks on the matter were unlikely to be completed before “the middle of next week”.

“There also remains the question of other department­s,” said Bennour, whose party is calling on Ennahda to reverse a series of disputed appointmen­ts in public institutio­ns and regions of Tunisia.

Interior Minister Ali Larayedh was charged last week with forming a new government following the resignatio­n of prime minister Hamadi Jebali, after his plan for a non-partisan government failed.

Jebali announced the plan on February 6, the day that a lone gunman shot dead leftist opposition leader Chokri Belaid outside his home in the capital Tunis.

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