Ennahda still trying to use Tunisia developments in its favor
Despite its current calm, Ennahda Movement, the branch of the Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia, still clings to a policy of secret escalation against Tunisian President Kais Saied who has become the movement's no. 1 enemy.
Ennahda's vice-president, Ali Laarayedh, told the BBC recently that his movement still views
the events in Tunisia as a 'coup'.
In this, Laarayedh
contradicts the
movement's leader Rached Ghannouchi who considered the same events 'an
opportunity for reform'.
Ennahda apparently tries to take some steps backwards in
its attempt to cope up with developments in Tunisia and the loss of the
political gains it made in the past 11 years.
Attacks against Saied
Restraint as a policy cannot apparently prevent Ennahda
from returning to its traditional course of attacks against the Tunisian
president.
The movement is launching media warfare against Saied with
the aim of undermining the support base he managed to create since dissolving
the parliament and sacking the cabinet on July 25.
The British news site, Middle East Eye, has recently
claimed that Saudi Arabia had used the Israeli Pegasus spyware to spy on the
leader of the Muslim Brotherhood movement in Tunisia.
The site, opposed to Saied's decisions, said Ghannouchi's
phone number was found in a list of 50,000 phone numbers obtained by a group of
international organizations and newspapers that cooperated in investigating the
Pegasus spying scandal.
Ennahda did not miss this opportunity. It expressed condemnation
of the targeting of the head of Tunisia's legislative authority by a foreign power.
It considered this an attack on the Tunisian state and its
sovereignty. The movement also called on Tunisian authorities to investigate
the matter and take the required action against this 'external aggression'.