Egypt offers ‘full support’ for Tunisian president

Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry adresses his Arab counterparts during a consultative meeting in the Qatari capital Doha, on June 15, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 04 August 2021
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Egypt offers ‘full support’ for Tunisian president

  • Egypt’s foreign minister met with Kais Saied in Tunis
  • Tunisia is undergoing ‘a historic moment, undertaken by a person who attaches the highest importance to the values of democracy,’ Shoukry said

TUNIS: Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry on Tuesday threw his country’s “full support” behind Tunisian President Kais Saied, who has suspended parliament, sacked the prime minister and seized executive power.
“We affirm the full support of the Arab Republic of Egypt for the stability and the fulfullment of the will of the Tunisian people,” Shoukry said after meeting Saied in Tunis.
On July 25, Saied invoked the constitution to seize executive power in what his main opponents, the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party, denounced as a “coup.”
Nine days later, Tunisia is still awaiting the appointment of a new prime minister.

Tunisia is undergoing “a historic moment, undertaken by a person who attaches the highest importance to the values of democracy, the constitution and institutions,” Shoukry said.
Saied visited Cairo in late 2020 to meet Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, who overthrew an elected Islamist government in 2013, and has since led a crackdown on the opposition, especially the now-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood.
On Saturday, the United States urged Tunisia to quickly return to the “democratic path.”
The young democracy, with a population of around 12 million people, had often been cited as the sole success story of the 2011 Arab Spring.
But a decade on, many say they have seen little improvement in living standards, and are frustrated by Tunisia’s protracted political deadlock and infighting among the elite.
Tunisia is also in economic crisis as well as struggling to contain cases of Covid-19, with hospitals overwhelmed and shortages of oxygen.


Syria army’s clashes with Kurds ‘setback’ to Turkiye peace process: PKK spokesman

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Syria army’s clashes with Kurds ‘setback’ to Turkiye peace process: PKK spokesman

  • “The developments in Syria and the larger Middle East have a direct effect on the peace process in Turkiye,” said Hiwa
  • The attacks “against the Kurds are a plot and conspiracy against the peace process”

BAGHDAD: Recent clashes between Syria’s military and Kurdish forces are a “setback” and a “plot” to derail the PKK peace process with Turkiye, a spokesman for the Kurdish militant group told AFP on Tuesday.
“The developments in Syria and the larger Middle East have a direct effect on the peace process in Turkiye,” said Zagros Hiwa, spokesman for the political wing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party.
The attacks “against the Kurds are a plot and conspiracy against the peace process and they indicate a setback in the process,” he said.
Syria’s government and Kurdish forces on Saturday extended a truce by 15 days after the Kurds lost large areas to government forces during weeks of clashes.
The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) find themselves now restricted to Kurdish-majority areas in the country’s north.
Turkiye is a close ally of Syria’s new leadership that overthrew Bashar Assad in December 2024, and which is now seeking to extend state control across Syria.
Ankara is simultaneously leading a drive to reach a settlement with the PKK — listed as a terror group by Turkiye and its Western allies.
Last year, the PKK said it was ending its four-decade insurgency in favor of democratic means but the process has largely stalled amid the stand-off in Syria.
Turkiye accuses the Syrian Kurdish forces of being an offshoot of the PKK.
Hiwa said the PKK’s “commitment to the peace process is a strategic issue.”
But he added that “the new strategy does not exclude the urgency of self-defense against genocidal attacks.”