*Tunisia opposition threatens more anti-government protest*

August 15, 2013 01:25 PM (Last updated: August 15, 2013 08:08 PM)By Tarek
Amara <http://www.dailystar.com.lb/Tarek-Amara.ashx>[image: Reuters][image:
Tunisian demonstrators, bearing the colours of their national flag, shout
slogans during a protest against the country's Islamist-led government in
front of the Constituent Assembly headquarters in Tunis on August 13, 2013.
TOPSHOTS / AFP PHOTO / FETHI BELAID]Tunisian demonstrators, bearing the
colours of their national flag, shout slogans during a protest against the
country's Islamist-led government in front of the Constituent Assembly
headquarters in Tunis on August 13, 2013. TOPSHOTS / AFP PHOTO / FETHI
BELAID[image: A+][image: A-]

TUNIS: Tunisia's secular opposition threatened on Thursday to step up
anti-government protests after the head of the ruling Islamist party rejected
its demand to make way for a non-party government.

Ennahda party chairman Rached Ghannouchi offered to form a national unity
government if all political parties take part, but said a caretaker cabinet
of non-partisan technicians could not "manage the delicate situation in the
country".

Speaking a day after Egypt's army cracked down on backers of deposed
Islamist President Mohamed Mursi, he also warned the opposition not to
flirt with the idea of a military coup.

The Islamist-opposition standoff amounted to the deepest crisis that
Tunisia, one of the most secular Muslim countries, has faced since
launching the "Arab Spring" revolutions by overthrowing autocrat Zine
el-Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011.

Jilani Hammami, a leader of the opposition Salvation Front of a dozen
parties formed last month after the second killing of a secular politician
by suspected Islamist radicals this year, said Ghannouchi's rejection
"shows Ennahda's true face".

"They have announced a power struggle with the opposition," he said. "We
will only accept the dissolution of the government. We will step up
pressure around the country and launch a campaign to make the Islamists
leave office."

Sami Tahri, deputy secretary general of the Tunisian General Labour
Union (UGTT)
federation, said Ghannouchi's position was "a step backwards that goes
against the will of a large part of the people".

The UGTT, a broad-based organisation that could prove decisive in any
showdown between Ennahda and the opposition, will announce early next week
how it will step up its campaign for a non-partisan government, he said.

Ghannouchi's declaration effectively ended three weeks of crisis
discussions in which Ennahda seemed to be edging towards a deal with the
opposition. Even his deputy party leader Hamadi Jebali backed the call for
a non-party government on Wednesday.

At a news conference on Thursday, Ghannouchi said "we refuse a non-partisan
government because this type of government could not manage the delicate
situation of the country".

"Events in Egypt should push us towards dialogue," he said, calling
Wednesday's bloody crackdown - in which at least 525 people were killed -
"a failure for democracy in Egypt".

"Those who want another al-Sisi in Tunisia," he said, referring to Egyptian
military leader General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, "should not continue to dream
about that".

Ghannouchi admitted that Tunisia's first Islamist-led government had not
handled some economic and social problems all that well. "We've made
mistakes, but that doesn't merit a coup d'etat," he said.

Few observers expect Tunisia's military to step in to resolve the current
crisis because it does not have the same tradition of political
intervention and economic empire-building as its counterparts in Egypt.

But Tunisia's opposition has been emboldened by the way the Egyptian
military, acting after a renewed wave of protests against Mursi, ousted the
Islamist leader last month and drove his Muslim Brotherhood from power.

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, the first senior European
official to visit Tunisia since the crisis broke out three weeks ago, urged
both sides to pursue a dialogue and held up Egypt as an example not to be
followed.

"Tunisia is not Egypt," he said after a meeting with Prime Minister Ali
Larayedh. "Tunisia is on a path of change and what happened in Egypt must
not happen in Tunisia."

He said a solution was possible through dialogue "if all parties now act
with the necessary far-sightedness and do justice to their responsibility
for the country".

The opposition parties have said they will not consider any cooperation
with Ennahda until it steps down, a step Ghannouchi refuses to take.

Meanwhile, an assembly elected to draw up a new constitution within a year
missed that deadline and was then suspended after leftist leader Mohamed
Brahmi was assassinated in late July.

Jihadi militants have also stepped up attacks to destabilise the government.

Ghannouchi said the constituent assembly should first resume its work. "The
constituent assembly should reopen quickly to finish the constitution and
then proceed to elections," he said.


Read more:
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2013/Aug-15/227469-tunisia-islamist-chief-rejects-demand-for-neutral-government.ashx#ixzz2c5GkghRR

(The Daily Star :: Lebanon News :: http://www.dailystar.com.lb)


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