Tunisian Parliament Speaker Rashid Ghannouchi called for protection of the democratic experience in his country, amid warnings of attempts to overthrow it with external support. While pressure is mounting on the resigned Prime Minister, Elias Al-Fakhfakh, to give up his duties, suspicions of the conflicts of interest that follow him are entrenched.

During a symposium held today in Parliament on the National Anti-Corruption Strategy, she tried to disrupt the Free Constitutional Party bloc (16 out of 217 deputies) by raising slogans in the middle of the hall.

Ghannouchi warned against those who seek to undermine the democratic experience through what he described as a populist discourse selling illusions and marketing to disrupt the institutions of the state, stressing the importance of establishing the Constitutional Court to stop the debate over the interpretation and interpretation of the constitution.

These statements come at a time when the deputies of the Free Constitution Party, whose roots go back to the dissolved Constitutional Democratic Rally party, continue to sit in the parliament and disrupt its sessions as part of a move aimed at removing the leader of the Ennahda Movement (54 deputies).

Al-Nahda movement denounced what it described as the bullying carried out by members of this party in parliament, and filed lawsuits against him in the judiciary.

Badr al-Din Qamudi, head of the Parliament’s Anti-Corruption Committee and deputy for the Democratic Bloc, also held the bloc responsible for the Free Constitutional Bloc - trying to disrupt the parliament’s session on the national anti-corruption strategy — and denounced what he called the violence practiced by its representatives at the parliament session.

In the face of the disruption in the work of Parliament, including the session that was dedicated to electing a number of members of the Constitutional Court, Ghannouchi and his first deputy today met President Qais Saeed, while a representative of the Public Prosecution and the Judicial Police examined the sit-in of the Free Constitutional Party in Parliament.

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Posted by Author Abdullatif Alawi on Sunday, 19 July 2020

The UAE and Egypt
The remarks of the Tunisian parliament speaker came today, in light of explicit accusations by leaders of the Renaissance Movement for the Emirates and Egypt of supporting the movements of the Free Constitutional Party and other parties to overthrow the democratic process in Tunisia.

In the context, the head of the Ennahda Movement bloc, Noureddine Al-Behairi, said in a blog post on his Facebook page that Emirati and Egyptian websites voted for the head of the Free Constitutional Party, Abeer Moussa, in the polls.

Al-Buhairi added that the process aims to delude public opinion that Moussa is the alternative to legitimate and elected institutions in Tunisia similar to the Parliament, adding that the size of the UAE, Egypt and Haftar’s hatred against Tunisia has become very large.

In turn, Abdel-Latif Al-Alwi, a member of the Karama Coalition (19 seats), published screen images of voters on a poll in Facebook, which included fake accounts and the other Egyptian and Libyan.

The headquarters of the Chamber of Advisors, the upper house of parliament, witnessed skirmishes between deputies of the Free Constitutional Bloc and representatives of the Ennahda Movement who opposed the Mossi block’s disruption to the work of today's anti-corruption seminar.

Pressure mounting
On the other hand, the Democratic Current Party, a component of the government coalition, has called on resigned Prime Minister Elias al-Fakhakh to delegate the caretaker mission to one of his ministers.

The same party also asked its ministers participating in the caretaker government to continue their tasks "in order to preserve the continuity of the state and the national interest."

The National Council of the party recommended to the Political Bureau to intensify consultations on what he called - the basis for forming a joint government that dissociates itself from partisan interests and is serious about continuing the path of actual reform capable of improving the economic and social conditions of the country.

The Al-Nahda movement and other parties inside and outside the coalition have also demanded the resigned prime minister to delegate his duties to a member of the government, and to devote himself to defending himself.

And the traps resigned last Wednesday after Ennahdha, the largest party in the coalition, decided to withdraw confidence from it, and the latter responded by sacking the movement's six ministers, even though it was now in the rule of the resigned.

In a development that cemented suspicions of conflicts of interest that were raised last month about companies that have traps in which they have shares, and concluded deals with the state, a report by the National Anti-Corruption Commission called on the Attorney General to issue travel ban and freeze funds to some of the suspects in this case.

The commission did not mention - in a statement to it - whether the traps were among those concerned with the required orders or not, but indicated that it transmitted to the Judicial Department concerned with financial and economic crimes a second report that includes supporting documents related to suspicions of conflicts of interest and financial and administrative corruption, tax evasion, long deals The state entered into it with companies in which traps own shares.