President of the Free Constitutional Party, Abeer Moussa, stormed today the headquarters of the International Union of Muslim Scholars in Tunisia, demanding that it be dissolved, claiming that it is an organization that propagates terrorism, while the Secretary-General of the Union Ali Mohieddin Al-Qaradaghi described this intrusion as a criminal act in violation of the laws, promising to prosecute Moussa, who had previously been rejected by the judiciary. She raised her demanding the cessation of union activity.

Tunisia’s board member Lotfi al-Amdouni said in a statement to Anadolu Agency that Moussa and her supporters stormed the headquarters of the federation today, Tuesday, in the Tunisian capital, raising provocative slogans to members and activists inside, accusing them of terrorism.

Al-Qarah Daghi - in an interview with Al-Jazeera Mubasher - stated that what Moussa did in breaking into a criminal act violates the laws and the values ​​of the Tunisian people and democracy, adding that “Moussa’s storming of the branch (the Union branch) is a crime that we will not tolerate and we will raise the matter to the judiciary, especially since our institution is recognized. From the state and has a permit. "

He denied the charges

The Secretary-General of the Union of Muslim Scholars denied Moussa’s accusations to the federation of acting as a back channel to support the Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia, stressing that it is trading without evidence or reality.

He explained that the union is not a political institution, it is not a party to the political crisis in Tunisia, it does not interfere in it, it has no relationship with any group, party or country, and it includes thousands of scholars in 93 countries.

The Tunisian politician Abeer Moussa, who is known for her anti-Islamic currents, wrote yesterday in a post on her Facebook account, "From the tent of anger in front of the suspected headquarters of the Al-Qaradawi Union, we celebrate International Women's Day and reject backward reactionary thought."

Moussa told a crowd of her supporters today that she would not leave the headquarters of the federation until it was dissolved.

Last November, the Tunisian judiciary rejected a lawsuit filed by the Free Constitutional Party aimed at stopping the union's activity in Tunisia.

Moussa has repeatedly announced that it opposes the 2011 revolution, which toppled the regime of the late Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, and expresses its continued hostility to the Ennahda movement, which has an Islamic reference.