Ghannouchi won 52% of the vote from the island’s crowd. Ghannouchi survived an attempt to withdraw confidence from him in Parliament through a campaign led by MPs opposed to Ennahda, after Ghannouchi's opponents failed to obtain the minimum required to withdraw confidence from him.

And the former King of Spain, Juan Carlos, who got 21% of the vote, came second after leaving his country to live in exile, following a judicial investigation in Switzerland and Spain that proved that he had received 100 million dollars from Saudi Arabia in 2008 to facilitate the Haramain train deal.

And in third place came the Iraqi boy, Hamid Saeed, who got 16%. A tape showing 3 security officers stripping him, expanding them beating him, and insulting him indecently, provoked angry reactions.

The fourth place went to the veteran Spanish goalkeeper Iker Casillas, who received 11% of the vote after his decision to retire from football after a long career that he started with Real Madrid and sealed with Porto.

The week happened

As for the most important event of the week, as was expected, it was the explosion at the Port of Beirut, which swept the vote after it received 92% of the votes of the Al Jazeera crowd.

The developments of the Renaissance Dam crisis, and the UAE-backed Southern Transitional Council tightening its control over the Yemeni island of Socotra, shared the second place, after they each received 4% of the vote.