Tunisian Prime Minister-designate Elias Fakhfakh-Sat- submitted the formation of his proposed government, but said that he would continue to consult with the parties after the Ennahdha party rejected this government.

Al-Fakhfakh said that the Al-Nahda movement withdrew from the proposed formation one hour before its announcement, due to the lack of involvement of the "Heart of Tunisia" party, he said.

Al-Fakhfakh described the withdrawal of Ennahda movement as placing the country in front of a difficult situation, stressing his agreement with the President of the Republic to use the remaining constitutional deadlines to take the appropriate direction.

The Anatolia Agency revealed that the Tunisian Renaissance Movement announced on Saturday that it would withdraw its candidates from the government proposed by the Prime Minister-designate, Elias Fakhfakh, and not give it confidence.

After a meeting of the movement's Shura Council, its president, Abdel Karim Al-Harouni, said - at a press conference - that the Al-Nahda parliamentary bloc will not give confidence to the government of Elias Al-Fakhfakh.

He attributed this decision to the traps insistence on rejecting the movement's demand to form a "government of national unity that does not exclude anyone," as he put it.

"Al-Nahda" topped the results of the last parliamentary elections last October, with 54 seats out of 217.

Al-Fakhfakh said on January 24 that ten political parties have expressed their willingness to participate in the government.

These parties are: Al-Nahda, the Democratic Current (Social Democrat / 22 deputies), Al-Karama coalition (revolutionary / 18 deputies), the People's Movement (Nasseri / 15 deputies), and Long live Tunisia (liberal / 14 deputies), and the Tunis Project (liberal / 4 deputies) ).

Likewise, the appeal of Tunisia (liberal / 3 deputies), the Tunisian alternative (liberal / 3 deputies), the prospects for Tunisia (liberal / two deputies) and the People's Republican Union (centrist / two deputies).

Then, the traps added that the "Heart of Tunisia" party (liberal / 38 deputies), and "Free Constitutional" (liberal / 17 deputies) would be outside the government coalition, because "there is no democracy without real opposition."

But the leader of the Nahda movement, Rashid Ghannouchi, announced a week ago that "the government of the traps will not pass and will not gain the confidence of Parliament if the (heart) party of Tunisia is excluded from its formation."

Experts said - in conversations to Anatolia earlier - that Ennahda insists on involving the "Heart of Tunisia" in the government to avoid the possibility of suffering from isolation within the government of traps, and to ensure more stability, because the "Heart of Tunisia" is a front for political, economic and media powers.

The head of the "Heart of Tunisia" party, Nabil Karoui, said earlier Saturday that he had refused to invite traps to see the formation of the government "out of respect for his party, militants and voters."