Tunisia presidential runner Saied quits campaigning

Tunisian presidential candidate Kais Saied announced Saturday that he was quitting campaigning, in order to avoid an unfair advantage over his jailed opponent Nabil Karoui. (File/AFP)
Updated 05 October 2019
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Tunisia presidential runner Saied quits campaigning

  • An independent professor of law, Saied won the first round of voting on September 15
  • He remained low-key after the vote, avoiding some television appearances

TUNIS: Tunisian presidential candidate Kais Saied announced Saturday that he was quitting campaigning, in order to avoid an unfair advantage over his jailed opponent Nabil Karoui.
“I will not personally campaign on moral grounds, to avoid any doubt over the fairness between the candidates,” Saied wrote on his Facebook page.
An independent professor of law, Saied won the first round of voting on September 15 with a low-budget grassroots campaign conducted largely via Facebook. He remained low-key after the vote, avoiding some television appearances.
His rival, media mogul Karoui, has been under investigation since 2017 for money laundering and tax evasion and was arrested on August 23 — a week before the campaigning started for the first round presidential vote.
With the run-off vote scheduled for October 13, Tunisia’s president, the United Nations, international observers and numerous politicians have called for “equal opportunity” between the two candidates.
Interim president Mohamed Ennaceur warned Friday that Karoui’s detention was “an abnormal situation that could have serious and dangerous repercussions on the electoral process.”
The United Nations called for “peaceful and transparent” elections.
Karoui accuses his political rivals, notably Ennahdha, of politicizing the judicial process.
His supporters have raised the possibility of appealing the outcome if Karoui isn’t elected.
Saied nonetheless stressed his “deep conviction that equal opportunities must also include the means available to both candidates,” referring to Karoui’s media and financial empire mobilized for his campaign.
Karoui has campaigned via Nessma — the leading private television channel that he founded — and through his wife Salwa Smaoui, who has given interviews to local and international media.
The drama of the presidential race has eclipsed Sunday’s legislative elections, a key vote for this country that led the Arab Spring, where parliament has a wide prerogative over crucial issues including the economy.


Son of jailed Palestinian politician Marwan Barghouti demands UK do more to secure his release

Updated 6 sec ago
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Son of jailed Palestinian politician Marwan Barghouti demands UK do more to secure his release

  • Arab Barghouti warns failure to free his father despite UK backing Palestinian statehood would give ‘false hope’ 
  • Marwan Barghouti has been imprisoned by Israel for 22 years but regularly tops polls for next Palestinian president

LONDON: The son of renowned Palestinian politician Marwan Barghouti has demanded that the UK government make his release from Israeli prison a central part of its efforts to support a Palestinian state.

Arab Barghouti said his father’s freedom is essential to continue the political process after the UK announced that it would recognize a Palestinian state last year.

“Simply saying ‘we support a two-state solution’ without doing anything about it is deepening the problem, because you are just giving the Palestinian people false hopes,” Arab Barghouti said.

His intervention comes amid a campaign by British MPs from across the political spectrum to secure Marwan Barghouti’s release. 

He has been in prison for 22 years after being convicted of five murders, but the UK’s Inter-Parliamentary Union found in an inquiry in 2003 that his trial failed to meet several fairness criteria.

Simon Henderson, the author of the IPU inquiry, told a meeting in Westminster that of the 96 witnesses in the trial, only 21 could testify over Marwan Barghouti’s involvement in the deaths of the four Israelis and one Greek, but that none confirmed it and 12 specifically exonerated him of blame. 

A Fatah member who is referred to as the Palestinian Nelson Mandela, he regularly tops polls of who the Palestinian people believe would make a good successor to current President Mahmoud Abbas.

Arab Barghouti said: “The UK recognition of Palestine is going to be seen as symbolic in the history books as long as there are no actual steps being taken on the ground.”

He added: “Current Palestinian politics is dysfunctional and that can only be changed with democratic renewal, including a new leadership that really represents the people. We have not had elections for 20 years.

“My father does not have a magic stick, he cannot change everything overnight, but people look at my father as a source of hope.”

Over the past 15 years, Israel has released more than 500 Palestinian prisoners serving life sentences, but Barghouti has always been excluded from such deals.

His son said: “The reason he is not being released is because the Israeli government does not want a legitimate Palestinian leader, because it does not want a two-state solution.”

Adding that his father has been held in solitary confinement since Oct. 7, 2023, and is regularly assaulted by guards, he added: “If that is not an invitation to speak out against the violations of international law, I don’t know what is.

“I would expect the UK government, as an upholder of international law, to go further and call for his release.

“He can change the status quo, Palestinian politics, and take us on a path to where there is real hope for a political settlement.

“We have not yet had brave enough British politicians when it comes to the highest level of politics.”

The Foreign Office has not supported calls for Marwan Barghouti’s release, but said it affirms the right of Palestinians in Israeli prisons to have access to the International Committee of the Red Cross.