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On the front page of the press, estimates at the end of the first round of the presidential election of yesterday, in Tunisia. Official results will not be announced tomorrow.

At the end of the poll, the pollsters put Kaïs Saïed and Nabil Karoui in the lead - two candidates whose qualification for the second round, if confirmed, would be the equivalent of a "political earthquake", according to Al Chourouk . The Tunisian newspaper sees the arrival at the head of Kaïs Saïed, a conservative academic and businessman Nabil Karoui, currently incarcerated for "tax evasion" and "money laundering" alleged the result of the disaffection of Tunisians to the traditional political parties, in power since the 2011 revolution. Business News evokes the "disinterest" - and even "disgust" of Tunisians who would have produced this face-to-face Saeed / Karoui, which would give "cold sweats" to those "Still having faith in democracy": "Conservatism against populism: the choice will not be simple and will not be done without tears and without pain," already warns the Tunisian site, which also quotes the low participation rate of this first turn, around 45%, 20 points less, than in the presidential election of 2014. Eight years after the revolution, the site has the wave to the soul. "As the country builds - softly but surely - the foundations of a strong and lasting democracy, citizens do not find a better choice than to take refuge in conservatism or populism". "Something has necessarily messed up". Tunisia Numérique , another Tunisian site, wants to be optimistic. The website recalls that this Tunisian presidential election is still "an exception, and an example of democracy in the Arab world", both by "the multitude of candidacies", 26 in total, and by "the respect of the right of every citizen to candidate, "or" the number of televised debates ". Tunisia Numérique evokes a democratic exercise "in all its splendor", in an Arab world "where one knows, generally in advance, the identity of the new president and the occult powers, often foreign, behind his enthronement".

And it is a fact, this election is followed closely by the neighbors of Tunisia, starting with Algeria, where the power announced yesterday the date of the presidential election. According to El Moudjahid , Acting President Abdelkader Bensalah has set this date as December 12, according to the will of the Army Chief of Staff, General Gaid Salah, who wants the presidential election to take place before the end of the year: "a strategic objective", according to the official journal - which explains that this decision avoids "a damaging constitutional vacuum", and to elect a "legitimate" President of the Republic. But these arguments do not convince the opposition daily El Watan , who regrets to see "the power (to go to the end of its logic"), "despite the opposition of the popular movement", which sees in especially in holding election, a means for the "system" to maintain power. The protesters continue to demand the departure of Gaïd Salah and Abdelkader Bensalah, who is seen in Hic's drawing, proposing them, then begging them, in vain, to go to the polls. A drawing found on Twitter .

Also on the front page this morning is the drone attacks perpetrated on Saturday against oil installations in Saudi Arabia. Attacks claimed by Houthi rebels from neighboring Yemen. According to the UAE daily The Nationa l, these attacks result in a halving of Saudi production, causing global concern over a possible rise in crude prices. Concerns that the Saudi oil company, Aramco, is trying to calm down by trying to restart its facilities as soon as possible. "Saudi Arabia hit in its economic heart," announces The East Day . According to the Lebanese newspaper, "in a context of strong tensions between the United States and Iran, which supports the Houthis, these strikes could provoke a new escalation and reduce the chances of a future meeting between the American president Donald Trump and his Iranian counterpart Hassan Rohani ". While the Middle East Eye pan-Arab website claims that the strikes were launched from Iraqi territory, in retaliation for Saudi attacks on drones against Iraqi Shiite militias backed by Tehran, The Iran Daily refutes these accusations and cites the reaction of the door. and the Foreign Minister, who described them as "incomprehensible and (insane)", Tehran suggesting that these accusations are actually intended to justify "future actions" against Iran.

No question of leaving without mentioning the last statement of Boris Johnson. The British Prime Minister has assured this weekend that "huge progress" had been made in recent days to reach an agreement on Brexit, before comparing his country to superhero Hulk: "More Hulk gets angry "The more Hulk gets strong and he always escapes, even if he looks well tied up, and that's the case with this pay." Did Ben Johnson really think of himself? That's what British cartoonists have understood, as evidenced by Ben Jennings' drawing for The Guardian , which shows him in Hulk, "the sulky," raising Westminster under the impassive eye of European negotiators. Morland's drawing, for The Times , where we see him attempting to repair the United Kingdom in the style of Hulk. This is not a surgical precision ... Not sure that his method is enough to revive the English patient.

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