Islamic party sweeps Tunisian election
The Islamic Ennahda party now has the single-biggest share of the assembly that will rewrite the constitution.
TUNIS:
Tunisia's main Islamic party emerged victorious Thursday in the Arab Spring's first elections, taking 90 of 217 seats in the new assembly nine months after the ouster of dictator Zine el Abidine Ben Ali.
Violent protests broke out in the central town of Sidi Bouzid, where the uprising started last December, after the provisional results were announced, witnesses and the interior ministry said.
The Islamic Ennahda party now has the single-biggest share of the assembly that will rewrite the constitution, appoint a president and form a caretaker government, elections chief Kamel Jendoubi told journalists in Tunis.
He also announced the invalidation of six candidates' lists of the Petition for Justice and Development, including one in Sidi Bouzid, notably due to "financial irregularities".
The group, led by Hechmi Haamdi, a rich London-based businessman said to have close ties to Ben Ali, still managed fourth place with 19 assembly seats.
Following the announcement of the invalidations however, Haamdi said he was withdrawing his candidates from the assembly.
Haamdi had campaigned from London via his satellite television station al-Mustakilla.
In one broadcast earlier Thursday he said he "feared" his supporters would display anger after Ennahda refused to include his grouping in negotiations to form a new government.
Witnesses said more than 2,000 young people marched on Ennahda's headquarters in Sidi Bouzid when the results were announced and pelted security forces with stones. An AFP correspondent said they broke doors and windows of the Ennahda building and burnt tyres on the town's main road.
According to the TAP news agency, "acts of destruction and pillaging also took place at the municipality".
Witnesses reported a similar protest in the town of Regueb, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) from Sidi Bouzid, where a gunshot was fired at an Ennahda office.
On the main road in the capital Tunis however, the results were met with a cacophony of car hooters blaring, as people hung out of car windows singing and waving Ennahda and Tunisian flags.
The provisional results put two leftist parties in second and third place after Sunday's historic polls: the Congress for the Republic (CPR) obtaining 30 seats, and Ettakatol 21 seats.
The ISIE electoral commission said political groups had two days to lodge challenges to the results.
Ennahda was banned under Ben Ali's regime and only registered as a political party in March.
But on Wednesday, preempting the official news of its victory, Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi said it had started coalition negotiations and intended to form a new government "within no more than a month."
The party, which presents itself as having a moderate Islamic agenda, has put forward Ennahda's number two, Hamadi Jebali, as candidate for prime minister.
The new assembly will determine the country's system of government and how to guarantee basic liberties, including women's rights, which many in Tunisia fear Ennahda would seek to diminish despite its assurances to the contrary.
Analysts have said that Ennahda, even in a majority alliance, would be unable to "dictate" any programme to the assembly.
It will have to appease its coalition partners, a moderate-minded society, and the international community on whose investment and tourism the country relies heavily, they argue.
Ennahda said it had met bankers and stockbrokers earlier Thursday to reassure them.
The electoral system was designed to include as many parties as possible in drafting the new constitution, expected to take a year, ahead of fresh national polls.
Ennahda's Jebali on Wednesday signalled his intention to form an executive with the highest scoring leftist parties, singling out the CPR and Ettakatol.
He also stressed they had no intention "to impose a constitution ... that abrogates the freedom of belief, individual liberties, the legal position of women and their place in society.
"Is it reasonable to paralyse a sector as vital as tourism by interdicting alcoholic beverages and bathing suits?" he asked.
"These are individual liberties guaranteed for foreigners as much as for Tunisians."
Tourism represents about seven percent of GDP -- bringing in 780 million euros from January to September 2011, a drop of 39.4 percent from 2010.
The CPR has defended its coalition talks with the Islamic party.
"No, no, no it is not the devil and we do not make pacts with the devil," party leader Moncef Marzouki said on Wednesday.
"One must not take them for the Taliban of Tunisia. It is a moderate part of Islam."
The Progressive Democratic Party, which was polling in second place before the election, came fifth with 17 seats.
Tunisia's main Islamic party emerged victorious Thursday in the Arab Spring's first elections, taking 90 of 217 seats in the new assembly nine months after the ouster of dictator Zine el Abidine Ben Ali.
Violent protests broke out in the central town of Sidi Bouzid, where the uprising started last December, after the provisional results were announced, witnesses and the interior ministry said.
The Islamic Ennahda party now has the single-biggest share of the assembly that will rewrite the constitution, appoint a president and form a caretaker government, elections chief Kamel Jendoubi told journalists in Tunis.
He also announced the invalidation of six candidates' lists of the Petition for Justice and Development, including one in Sidi Bouzid, notably due to "financial irregularities".
The group, led by Hechmi Haamdi, a rich London-based businessman said to have close ties to Ben Ali, still managed fourth place with 19 assembly seats.
Following the announcement of the invalidations however, Haamdi said he was withdrawing his candidates from the assembly.
Haamdi had campaigned from London via his satellite television station al-Mustakilla.
In one broadcast earlier Thursday he said he "feared" his supporters would display anger after Ennahda refused to include his grouping in negotiations to form a new government.
Witnesses said more than 2,000 young people marched on Ennahda's headquarters in Sidi Bouzid when the results were announced and pelted security forces with stones. An AFP correspondent said they broke doors and windows of the Ennahda building and burnt tyres on the town's main road.
According to the TAP news agency, "acts of destruction and pillaging also took place at the municipality".
Witnesses reported a similar protest in the town of Regueb, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) from Sidi Bouzid, where a gunshot was fired at an Ennahda office.
On the main road in the capital Tunis however, the results were met with a cacophony of car hooters blaring, as people hung out of car windows singing and waving Ennahda and Tunisian flags.
The provisional results put two leftist parties in second and third place after Sunday's historic polls: the Congress for the Republic (CPR) obtaining 30 seats, and Ettakatol 21 seats.
The ISIE electoral commission said political groups had two days to lodge challenges to the results.
Ennahda was banned under Ben Ali's regime and only registered as a political party in March.
But on Wednesday, preempting the official news of its victory, Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi said it had started coalition negotiations and intended to form a new government "within no more than a month."
The party, which presents itself as having a moderate Islamic agenda, has put forward Ennahda's number two, Hamadi Jebali, as candidate for prime minister.
The new assembly will determine the country's system of government and how to guarantee basic liberties, including women's rights, which many in Tunisia fear Ennahda would seek to diminish despite its assurances to the contrary.
Analysts have said that Ennahda, even in a majority alliance, would be unable to "dictate" any programme to the assembly.
It will have to appease its coalition partners, a moderate-minded society, and the international community on whose investment and tourism the country relies heavily, they argue.
Ennahda said it had met bankers and stockbrokers earlier Thursday to reassure them.
The electoral system was designed to include as many parties as possible in drafting the new constitution, expected to take a year, ahead of fresh national polls.
Ennahda's Jebali on Wednesday signalled his intention to form an executive with the highest scoring leftist parties, singling out the CPR and Ettakatol.
He also stressed they had no intention "to impose a constitution ... that abrogates the freedom of belief, individual liberties, the legal position of women and their place in society.
"Is it reasonable to paralyse a sector as vital as tourism by interdicting alcoholic beverages and bathing suits?" he asked.
"These are individual liberties guaranteed for foreigners as much as for Tunisians."
Tourism represents about seven percent of GDP -- bringing in 780 million euros from January to September 2011, a drop of 39.4 percent from 2010.
The CPR has defended its coalition talks with the Islamic party.
"No, no, no it is not the devil and we do not make pacts with the devil," party leader Moncef Marzouki said on Wednesday.
"One must not take them for the Taliban of Tunisia. It is a moderate part of Islam."
The Progressive Democratic Party, which was polling in second place before the election, came fifth with 17 seats.