Ahad 10 Feb 2013 23:59 WIB

Tunisian president's party quits government

A tourist takes a picture at the archaeological site of Carthage, near Tunis February 10, 2013. Tunisia's tourism industry recorded a sharp drop in activity after the assassination of secular opposition leader Chokri Belaid that has plunged Tunisia deeper into political crisis.
Foto: Reuters/Zoubeir Souissi
A tourist takes a picture at the archaeological site of Carthage, near Tunis February 10, 2013. Tunisia's tourism industry recorded a sharp drop in activity after the assassination of secular opposition leader Chokri Belaid that has plunged Tunisia deeper into political crisis.

REPUBLIKA.CO.ID, TUNIS - Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki's secular party withdrew on Sunday from government already reeling from last week's assassination of secular opposition leader Chokri Belaid. Belaid's killing on Wednesday - Tunisia's first such political assassination in decades - has thrown the government and the country into turmoil, widening rifts between the dominant Islamist Ennahda party and its secular-minded foes.

"We have been saying for a week that if the foreign and justice ministers were not changed, we would withdraw from the government," Samir Ben Amor, an official of Marzouki's Congress for the Republic Party (CPR), told Reuters.

The CPR has criticised the performance of the two ministers, one of whom, Foreign Minister Rafik Abdessalem, is the son-in-law of Ennahda party leader Rachid Ghannouchi.

Ben Amor said the CPR's withdrawal was unconnected to Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali's decision, announced after Belaid was killed, to form a non-partisan government of technocrats to run the country until elections can be held later in the year.

Senior politicians in Ennahda, as well as in its two non-Islamist coalition partners, had criticised Jebali's proposal, saying he had failed to consult them first. Jebali said on Saturday he would unveil his new cabinet this week, but would resign if political parties did not support it.

A senior Ennahda official, who asked not to be named, said the National Constituent Assembly would have the final say, but added: "We see that it will be possible to form a government of technocrats that includes political parties."

Ben Amor said Marzouki's CPR would formally submit the resignation of its three ministers to Jebali on Monday. Political analyst Youssef Ouslati said the party was "trying to jump out of a sinking ship", but that its decision had no great weight because Jebali was now the central player. He said that if political uncertainty continued, "the street will be the crucial element".

Belaid's funeral drew tens of thousands of mourners in Tunis and other cities on Friday in what turned into mass political protests against Ennahda and the government it dominates. 

About 6,000 Ennahda supporters took to the streets of the capital on Saturday in a peaceful show of strength. Some members of Belaid's family have accused Ennahda of being behind the shooting, something the party denies.

Ghannouchi, Ennahda's leader, has threatened legal action against politicians or journalists pointing the finger at him, saying they were "exploiting the blood of the deceased for narrow political ends at the expense of the truth".

 

 

sumber : Reuters
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