Independent candidate Kais Said, who qualified for the second round of the Tunisian presidential elections, said he will work for Tunisia in all its components and all its spectrums, stressing that there is no room for exclusion and will work to build Tunisia with the same solidarity and will.

Said, who came first with the highest number of votes, told a news conference this evening after the election commission announced his passage to the second round of elections, that the status and dignity of Tunisian women will always keep in mind.

He explained that the Tunisian people now know what they want, and called for enabling them to have the legal mechanisms that allow them to achieve what they want.

He also expressed his respect for the will of the Tunisian people, pledging to continue building without being hostile to anyone and not to hostile to anyone, but to continue building and understanding with other nations and peoples.

Al-Jazeera's Tunisian correspondent Seif Eddine Boualak said Sa'id had completed his speech and said he did not consider himself a competitor to anyone. He offered a program for Tunisians and they must either choose his program or choose the villager.

The reporter added that the winner of the first place in the presidential elections is open to all political spectrums without excluding any party, and it will present legislative initiatives with the aim of bringing together all Tunisians and preventing political opportunism and so-called party tourism, that is, the transfer of deputies from one party to another.

Sa'id is also reluctant to support any political spectrum, but said that support would be for his program and not for him in his personal capacity.

These statements came shortly after the IHEC announced the final results of the presidential elections, which showed independent candidate Kais Said won 18.4% of the vote, followed by arrested businessman and candidate for the heart of Tunisia Nabil Karoui with 15.5%, to go together To the second round.

The results showed that the candidate of the Ennahda Movement, Abdel Fattah Moro, came in third place with 12.8%, while Defense Minister Abdel Karim Al-Zubaidi came fourth with 10.7% of the vote, followed by Prime Minister Youssef Chahed with 7.4%.

Traditional elections such as former President Moncef Marzouki, former Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali, Democratic Current leader Mohamed Abbou and leftist candidate Hamma Hammami, who received low proportions, have fallen dramatically.