Ali: Tunisian scenario to happen wherever Brotherhood rules
Chairman of the Board and Editor-in-Chief of al-Bawaba News and Director of the Center for Middle East Studies in Paris, Abdel Rahim Ali, has described latest developments in Tunisia as a 'normal result'.
"The same
thing can happen anywhere in the world where the Muslim Brotherhood takes the
reins of power," Ali said.
He wrote on
Facebook that Tunisia seems to be following in the footsteps of Egypt,
especially when it comes to the events of June 30, 2013.
The same
thing, he said, is happening today in Tunisia and will happen in all other
places where the Brotherhood reaches power.
"The
Brotherhood does not want to follow democratic principles," Ali said.
"It wants to impose its full control over states in ways that foment
violence and hatred."
He noted that
revolution is always a natural outcome of Brotherhood actions.
Ali's comments
came only minutes after Tunisian President Kais Saied froze the parliament,
suspended the parliamentary immunity of the members of Tunisia's Muslim
Brotherhood-dominated legislature and sacked his country's prime minister.
The Tunisian
leader took these decisions following a meeting with Tunisia's top security and
military officials.
The decisions
are yet a new blow to the Muslim Brotherhood in another Middle Eastern
stronghold.
The same
decisions coincide with Republic Day celebrations in Tunisia.
Several
Tunisian cities witnessed demonstrations against the government of sacked prime
minister Hichem Mechichi, hours before the Tunisian president made the
decisions.
Hundreds of
demonstrators also flocked to the Parliament Building to demand the dissolution
of the legislature.
Meanwhile, local
media reported that demonstrators attacked the headquarters of the Ennahda
Movement in a number of cities.
The demonstrators
chanted slogans for the overthrow of the government and against Ennahda and its
head Rached Ghannouchi who was the parliament speaker before the suspension of
the parliament.
These
demonstrations come in response to a previous call by activists, amid a state
of anger due to deteriorating economic conditions in Tunisia and the failure of
state institutions to respond effectively to the outbreak throughout the
country of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Angry protests
for ending Brotherhood control over Tunisia's political life seeped out of
Tunis, the capital of Tunisia, and into other cities and provinces.