Bangkok Post

Ballots cast in presidenti­al runoff race

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TUNIS: Tunisians were voting for president yesterday in an unusual contest pitting a populist tycoon who just got out of jail against a conservati­ve professor backed by resurgent Islamists.

The winner of yesterday’s runoff vote will inherit a North African country struggling to overcome corruption, unemployme­nt and sporadic extremist violence — but proud of its still-budding, post-Arab Spring democracy.

The choice for voters between two quirky candidates who have never held political office has made for an unpreceden­ted election.

The top performer in last month’s first-round vote was 61-year-old Kais Saied, an enigmatic former constituti­onal law professor dubbed “Robocop’’ for his austere bearing.

His challenger is Nabil Karoui, a glib, 56-year-old media mogul who spent most of the campaign behind bars on accusation­s of money laundering and tax evasion that he calls politicall­y driven.

The only thing the men have in common is their outsider status.

A well-heeled entreprene­ur who just started his political party this year, Mr Karoui campaigned on promises to fight the poverty that has hobbled Tunisia since its 2011 pro-democracy uprising unleashed revolts around the Arab world.

Detractors dubbed him “Nabil Macaroni’’ because his party distribute­s the noodles to the poor. He embraced it: “Nabil Macaroni, and proud to be,’’ Radio Mosaique quoted him as saying on Friday.

During an unpreceden­ted TV debate, Mr Karoui promised to combat extremist violence by “attacking at its roots’’ and raising economic prospects in struggling provinces that are fertile recruiting grounds for the Islamic State group and other extremists.

A self-proclaimed modernist, he said he would seek partnershi­ps with companies such as Microsoft, Google and Netflix to create jobs, and holds up women as pillars of society.

Mr Saied, a conservati­ve independen­t supported by the Islamist party Ennahdha, has drawn in support with his ‘Mr Clean’ image and by promising to rehaul the “pyramid of power’’ to give poorer provinces and youth more decision-making power.

He sits poker-straight, his blank visage hiding any visible sign of emotion, and speaks in a staccato style — and in literary Arabic, a tongue inaccessib­le to many in Tunisia’s rural interior. Firmly conservati­ve, he opposes equal inheritanc­e rights for daughters and sons, arguing that the hot-button issue is decided by the Quran, the Muslim holy book.

Despite the backing of moderate Islamist party Ennahdha, which won last week’s parliament­ary elections, he describes himself as politicall­y neutral.

“I am independen­t and will remain so until the end of my life,’’ he said.

Both men want Tunisia to work to bring peace to strife-ridden neighbour Libya.

 ?? AP ?? Nabil Karoui is seen speaking to supporters in Tunis on Friday.
AP Nabil Karoui is seen speaking to supporters in Tunis on Friday.

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