Tunisia’s Ennahdha sweeps municipal elections

Ennahdha party member Souad Abderrahim, center, celebrates her victory in the municipal elections in front of the movement's headquarters in Tunis on Sunday. (AFP)
Updated 11 May 2018
Follow

Tunisia’s Ennahdha sweeps municipal elections

  • Nationwide, independent lists won 2,367 seats, just shy of a third of the total.
  • Ennahdha took 2,135 seats and the Nidaa Tounes party of President Beji Caid Essebsi clinched 1,595

TUNIS: Ennahdha has beaten rivals in Tunisia’s first free municipal elections but failed to win outright majorities in a poll marked by voter frustration and a low turnout.

The election on Sunday was touted as another milestone on the road to democracy in the North African country, which has been praised for its transition from decades of dictatorship.

But Tunisia has struggled with persistent political, security and economic problems as well as corruption since its 2011 revolution that sparked the Arab Spring uprisings.

Ennahdha came first in several of the country’s main cities including Tunis, but fell short of winning outright majorities.

Nationwide, independent lists won 2,367 seats, just shy of a third of the total.

Ennahdha took 2,135 seats and the Nidaa Tounes party of President Beji Caid Essebsi clinched 1,595.

That put Ennahdha ahead in 155 of the country’s 350 municipalities, according to estimates by multiple NGOs.

“These results show a real emergence of independent lists as a new actor that will inevitably reshuffle the cards” politically, said analyst Selim Kharrat.

But he added that an alliance between Ennahdha and Nidaa Tounes — partners in a coalition government nationally since 2014 — could mean independents will remain in opposition.

The poll was marked by low turnout, with 64 percent of voters abstaining, the electoral commission said on Wednesday.

Tunisia’s 7,212 municipal councillors now have until July to elect their mayors.

The two top parties are expected to hold talks aimed at upholding their coalition.

The outcome “will depend on Ennahdha’s ability to negotiate and rally coalitions at the local level,” Kharrat said. Innahdha won 21 out of 60 seats in the capital, while Nidaa Tounes took 17.

If Ennahdha’s candidate Souad Abderrahim wins the backing of a majority of municipal councillors, the 53-year-old pharmacist could become the capital’s first ever female mayor, a post previously appointed by the president.


Iran, US to hold third round of nuclear talks on Thursday

Iranians walk past the Emamzadeh Saleh mosque in northern Tehran on February 23, 2026. (AFP)
Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Iran, US to hold third round of nuclear talks on Thursday

  • Diplomatic solution with Washington is still within ‌reach, Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi says

TEHRAN: Iran and the US will hold a third round of nuclear talks on Thursday in Geneva, Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi said on Sunday, amid growing concerns about the risk of military conflict between the ​longtime adversaries.

The US has built up its military presence in the Middle East, with President Donald Trump warning on Thursday that “really bad things will happen” if no deal is reached to solve a longstanding dispute over Tehran’s nuclear program.
“Pleased to confirm US-Iran negotiations are now set for Geneva this Thursday, with a positive push to go the extra mile toward finalizing the deal,” said Oman’s foreign minister, who acts as a mediator in indirect talks between Washington and Tehran.

FASTFACT

Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian voiced cautious optimism in a post on ‌X, saying recent negotiations had ‘yielded encouraging signals’ while pointing to Tehran’s readiness for ‘any ​potential ‌scenario.’

Reuters reported on Sunday that Iran was offering fresh concessions on its nuclear program in order to reach a deal, as long as it includes the lifting of economic sanctions and recognizes Tehran’s right to “peaceful nuclear enrichment.”
Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian voiced cautious optimism on Sunday ‌in a post on ‌X, saying recent negotiations had “yielded encouraging signals” while pointing to Tehran’s readiness for “any ​potential ‌scenario.”
Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff, who leads nuclear negotiations on the US side, said on Saturday that the US president was curious as to why Iran has not yet “capitulated” and agreed to curb its 
nuclear program.
“I don’t want to use the word ‘frustrated,’ because he understands he has plenty of alternatives, but he’s curious as to why they have not ... I don’t want to use the word ‘capitulated,’ but why haven’t they capitulated?” Witkoff said during an interview with Fox News’ “My View with Lara Trump,” hosted by the president’s daughter-in-law.
“Why, under this pressure, with the amount of seapower and naval power over there, why haven’t they come to us and said, ‘We profess we don’t want a weapon, so here’s what we’re prepared ‌to do’? And yet it’s sort of hard to get them ‌to that place.”
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi reacted in a post on X, saying: “Curious ​to know why we do not capitulate? Because we are ‌Iranian.”
He also said in an interview with CBS that a diplomatic solution with the US was still within ‌reach.
Indirect talks last year did not bring any agreement, primarily due to friction over a US demand that Iran forgo uranium enrichment on its soil, which Washington views as a pathway to a nuclear bomb. Iran has denied seeking such weapons.
The US joined Israel in hitting Iranian nuclear sites in June, effectively curtailing Iran’s uranium enrichment, with Trump saying its key nuclear sites were “obliterated.”
But Iran is still believed to possess stockpiles enriched previously, which Washington wants it to relinquish.
“They’ve been enriching well beyond the number that you need for civil nuclear. It’s up to 60 percent (fissile purity),” Witkoff said. 
“They’re probably a week away from having industrial, industrial-grade bomb-making material, and that’s really dangerous.”
Fresh concessions being considered by Iran include sending half of its highly enriched uranium abroad while diluting the rest.
Washington has also sought to expand the talks beyond the nuclear issue to cover Iran’s missile program and its support for regional armed groups. Iran has publicly rejected this, although sources have said that, unlike the missiles, support for armed groups may not be a red line for Tehran.
Another topic of friction is the scope and mechanism of lifting sanctions on Iran.
A senior Iranian official told Reuters on Sunday that Iran and the US still have differing views.
Witkoff also said he has met at Trump’s direction with Iranian opposition figure Reza Pahlavi, son of the shah ousted in Iran’s 1979 revolution.