Successive blows to Ghannouchi wing in Ennahda movement
Amid the rising voices of the
internal opposition against him, the head of the Tunisian Ennahda movement,
Rached Ghannouchi, received a heavy blow after the failure of most of those
close to him in the elections for the movement's executive office, and the rise
of leaders and elements of the opposition wing.
On Saturday, January 2, 2021, the
Ennahda movement announced the new formation of its 17-member executive office
following the 47th session of the Shura Council.
The results resulted in the fall of
many leaders close to Ghannouchi, led by his brother-in-law, former Foreign
Minister Rafiq Abdel Salam, former Minister of Transport Anwar Maarouf, former
Shura Council Speaker Fathi al-Ayadi, and former Minister of Economy Ridha
al-Saidi, along with Rida Idris and Muhammad al-Qoumani.
On the other hand, leaders belonging
to the anti-Ghannouchi wing, which is called the "Group of 100",
ascended to the new executive office, most notably former Minister of Health
Abdel-Latif Al-Makki, who is considered the leader of the internal opposition
in the Ennahda movement, and Reda Al-Barouni, one of those accused by the
Defense Committee of Shukri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi of belonging to the movement's
secret apparatus.
Fractured ranks in Tunisian
Brotherhood
On another level of the strikes
against Ghannouchi, informed sources told Al-Ain Al-Akhbariya that some leaders
affiliated with the Ennahda movement signed a petition calling on Ghannouchi to
reveal the sources of his vast wealth.
They explained that the submitted
petition calls for the removal of Ghannouchi’s son-in-law, Rafiq Abdel Salam,
from party responsibilities and all political plans in the movement.
This is not the first in which Ghannouchi's
son-in-law is the headline of financial corruption, as he was described in an
old message, released by Brotherhood leader Zubair al-Shahoudi, as being
corrupt.
According to the sources,
Ghannouchi's wealth intersects with the funds of the international organization
of the Brotherhood and is fed by smuggling and money laundering networks in the
region.
These sources close to the Ennahda
movement indicated that the Tunisian Parliament Speaker’s share of the
Brotherhood’s proceeds may reach more than $1 billion.
Ghannouchi leads an empire of
economic and media companies from behind the scenes, assisted by Abdel Salam
and his son Moaz, according to the sources.
The manifestations of the enormous
wealth prompted his companions to resign and include them in texts denouncing
the shadow empire led by the Ghannouchi family.
Resignations continue to bleed
Meanwhile, a leader in the movement
and a member of the policies committee within the Shura Council, Al-Arabi
Al-Qasimi, resigned after the council meeting.
Qasimi said in his resignation, “The
promises of reform after the tenth conference went unheeded, but rather
disasters settled in their place, which made the situation more rotten, the
climate tense, and relations corrupted.”
Qasimi accused the movement’s
leadership of having brought about “people who had nothing to do with the
movement, but rather were competitors and opponents, and empowered them in
higher decision-making positions and became influential and decision-makers at
the expense of the movement’s militants who built it with their suffering and
sacrifices.”
“The movement has corrupted
opportunistic interest lobbies that penetrated the decision-making sites,
deviating from its goals, imposing guardianship over its mechanisms and using
it to serve other than the nation. It has offered and preferred the lesser over
the good and the opportunist over the fighter until I no longer have the
capacity to bear this injustice and ambiguity, and I have to stop this
bleeding. I value what I can or express any responsibility for,” he added.
For nearly a year, the Ennahda
movement has witnessed many resignations among its leaders from the current
opposing Ghannouchi. Last March, Abd al-Hamid al-Jalasi, one of the movement’s
most prominent leaders since the 1980s, resigned in protest against
Ghannouchi's domination of the movement.
In November, Secretary General Ziad al-Athari
resigned “in rejection of the party's options in forming the government.”
Hisham al-Areedh, the son of party leader and former Prime Minister Ali al-Areedh,
and Ziad Boumakhla, two of the most prominent youth leaders, also announced
their resignation on January 14.
Prior to that, the director of
Ghannouchi's office, Zubair al-Shahudi, had announced in September 2019 his
resignation from the movement, calling on its head to “retire from politics and
remove his son-in-law Rafiq Abdel Salam and all leaders who violated the will
of the major voters, in a direct exclusion of all those who disagree with women,
youth and historic leaders.”
A report by the French magazine Le
Point described the way Ghannouchi runs the Ennahda movement as a “narrow
circle”, indicating that Ghannouchi had tightened his grip on the organization
through a group that included his son Moaz, and his son-in-law Abdel Salam.
The report said that Ghannouchi's
management of his movement “is in constant decline,” referring to the
resignation of his political advisor and director of his office for many years,
Lotfi Zaitoun, in July 2019 in protest against the way the movement was managed.
Observers believe that Ghannouchi's wealth came at the expense of millions of
Tunisians who are suffering from unemployment, poverty and helplessness in the
face of the economic crises caused by the successive Brotherhood governments.
In his comment on the new
resignation, Obaid Al-Khulaifi believes that it is “a continuation of the
bleeding of previous resignations, and there will be no new in the level of
results except for a further deepening of the disagreement and the formation of
two currents within the movement fighting for the helm of leadership that
cannot bear many names.”
He pointed out that “the Group of
100, the locomotive of the opposition within the movement, also appears to be
heterogeneous in its ambitions despite the minimum document that they agreed
upon. The hour when the leadership alternative is proposed, this group will
disappear, because the two parties to the conflict within Ennahda have the same
ideas and perceptions, and only leadership and power struggles separate them.”
Accountability
MP Munji al-Rahwi confirmed in
statements to Al-Ain Al-Akhbar that there is no way for the leaders of Ennahda
to escape accountability and reveal their secret files.
He explained that Tunisia lost the
battle of progress and democratic transition in light of the presence of a
party that believes in violence and incitement to murder and encourages takfir
in the parliament.
The slogan of the necessity of
accountability is also raised by the head of the Free Constitutional Party,
Abeer Moussa, who with her supporters is fighting sit-ins in the various
provinces in which the Qaradawi Union is present.
Also, the leader of the Democratic
Current Party, Samia Abbou, demanded in media statements the necessity of
disclosing Ghannouchi’s financial files, accusing him and his ally Saif
Makhlouf of money laundering.
Internal Ennahda movement
For more than a year, Ennahda has
been witnessing an internal movement opposing Ghannouchi, fearing that he might
run again for the party's leadership.
Article 31 of the revised Basic Law
of Ennahda, relating to the conditions for electing a party leader, stipulates
that no member has the right to hold the party leadership for more than two
consecutive terms, and that the party leader, upon his election, is devoted to
his duties as the head of the movement. However, Ghannouchi combined the
leadership of the movement with the presidency of the parliament.
For his part, Obaid al-Khulaifi, a
researcher and academic who specializes in political Islamist movements,
believes that the battle for the executive office “will not stand in front of
Ghannouchi's unlimited ambitions to remain as the head of the movement. Even if
it is true that he lost a round after the fall of the close circle, he still
has maneuver cards.”
Khulaifi added in an interview with
Sky News Arabia, “Ghannouchi still maintains his control over the movement
organizationally and logistically, and his anger is still able to subdue many
of the central structures supported by the pragmatism of the narrow leadership
circle. This confirms that this man in his movement was never democratic.”
“The battle is for the composition
of the executive office, which will ensure the preparation of the next
conference of the movement, and the next conference is an important chapter in
the disintegration of the movement or the eradication of sedition by formal
compromises that give political gifts to the heads of personal aspirations, and
by the personal satisfactions of a leader of a political movement who does not
imagine himself outside the equation of the presidency in Carthage or
Monplaisir (the organizational headquarters of the movement),” he added.



