Tunisians mark Belaid's murder anniversary, throwing light on Ennahda's militia

The Ennahda Movement, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia, goes from one crisis to crisis.
This was manifest a day
after Tunisians staged protests to mark the anniversary of the 2013 killing of
leftist activist Chokri Belaid who is believed to have
been killed by Ennahda.
The demonstrators chanted
slogans about the head of Ennahda, Rached
Ghannouchi,
calling him "murderer". They asked Ennahda to present Belaid's
assassins to court. The demonstrators also said the Islamist movement is in
power to only protect itself.
Under the microscope
Police used force to
disperse the demonstration, opening the door for impressions that freedoms are
taking steps back in Tunisia.
However, the
demonstration revived Ennahda's fears on Belaid's murder and links between this
murder and its secret militia.
Ennahda has been worried
since the late Tunisian president Beji
Caid Essebsi
who vowed in 2018 to present Belaid's murderers to court, hinting at the
possible involvement of Ennahda in this murder.
Meanwhile, lawyer Rida
al-Radawi, a member of a panel of lawyers defending the case of politicians
murdered in Tunisia in 2013, revealed new information about links between
Ennahda, on one hand, and the murder of Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi, another politician who was killed in the same
year, on the other.
He said he had reached
new information about the secret militia of Ennahda.
This militia, he said,
was formed as a security agency under a tip from the Muslim Brotherhood in
Egypt.
Al-Radawi noted that the
members of the secret militia were given training by a delegation from the
Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.
When the delegation
arrived in Tunisia, al-Radawi said, Ennahda claimed that it was here to give
Ennahda members a course in farming methods.