Ennahda's members rising up against Ghannouchi
The Ennahda movement, the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia, still cannot regroup.
The movement's failure to reunite
precedes its General Congress which takes place every four years.
Fifteen members of the movement had
recently frozen their membership in Ennahda's Consultative Council and
committees.
In this, these 15 members join in about
100 other members of the movement who had broken ranks with it.
They included deputies and former
ministers.
False stability
Nonetheless, Ennahda continues to
act defiantly in the face of these resignations, downplaying their effect on
it.
Head of the movement's Media and
Communications Section, Abdel Fattah Taghouti, expected the movement's internal
problems not to affect its democratic experience.
He said the latest resignations were
predicted ahead of the next General Congress.
"Ennahda can overcome such
normal pressures," Taghouti said.
Tunisian media has, meanwhile,
quoted some unnamed sources in the movement as saying that the members who
froze their membership had insisted on the dismissal of Rached Ghannouchi, the
movement's leader.
The same members accused Ghannouchi
of being responsible for the failure and collapse of the movement.
New rifts within Ennahda exacerbate
the movement's internal crisis, especially with its senior members locking
horns with Ghannouchi.
The same rifts open the door for
defections and the emergence of new entities that can be established by members
who had quit.
The movement's leader's
intransigence and defiance in the face of the demands of the members makes this
scenario very possible, observers say.
However, the leaders of the movement
are unresponsive to the demands of the majority of members.
They even look disconnected from the
streets in Tunisia where there is total rejection of the movement and its
leaders.
This makes the timing of the General
Congress of the movement totally inappropriate.