Tunisia’s presidential runner Saied quits campaigning
Avoids an unfair advantage over his jailed opponent Nabil Karoui
Tunisian presidential candidate Kais Saied announced on Saturday that he was quitting campaigning, in order to avoid an unfair advantage over his jailed opponent Nabil Karoui.
“I will not personally campaign on moral grounds, to avoid any doubt over the fairness between the candidates,” Saied wrote on his Facebook page. An independent professor of law, Saied won the first round of voting on Sept. 15 with a lowbudget grassroots campaign conducted largely via Facebook. He remained low-key after the vote, avoiding some television appearances.
His rival, media mogul Karoui, has been under investigation since 2017 for money laundering and tax evasion and was arrested on Aug. 23 — a week before the campaigning started for the first round presidential vote. He has been imprisoned since Aug. 23 on allegations of money laundering and tax evasion.
With the run-off vote scheduled for Oct. 13, Tunisia’s president, the UN, international observers and numerous politicians have called for “equal opportunity” between the two candidates.
Interim President Mohamed Ennaceur warned on Friday that Karoui’s detention was “an abnormal situation that could have serious and dangerous repercussions on the electoral process.” The UN called for “peaceful and transparent” elections.
Karoui accuses his political rivals, notably the Ennahda, of politicizing the judicial process.
His supporters have raised the possibility of appealing the outcome if Karoui is not elected. Saied nonetheless stressed his “deep conviction that equal opportunities must also include the means available to both candidates,” referring to Karoui’s memisunderstanding” dia and financial empire mobilized for his campaign.
Karoui has campaigned via Nessma — the leading private television channel that he founded — and through his wife Salwa Smaoui, who has given interviews to local and international media.
The drama of the presidential race has eclipsed Sunday’s legislative elections, a key vote for this country that led the Arab Spring, where Parliament has a wide prerogative over crucial issues including the economy.