Ennahda calls for convening postponed party congress to counter Tunisian parliament
At a time when the majority of
the elements of the Ennahda movement, the Brotherhood’s wing in Tunisia, are in
prisons, including their leader, Rached Ghannouchi, the temporary leadership of
the movement finds itself bound by the date of the party's eleventh congress scheduled
for October.
Inevitable to convene
Ennahda’s temporary leadership finds no escape from holding
its eleventh general congress at its expected date, as its acting president, Mondher
Ounissi, confirmed in previous press statements that the congress will be held
before the end of this year. At the same time, he revealed in recent media
statements that the congress will witness the election of a new executive
office apart from those imprisoned, hinting at the possibility of his own
candidacy for the position of head of the movement.
The anticipated congress, which has been postponed since May
2020, is considered one of the most important obstacles facing the movement’s temporary
leadership in the absence of its historical leaders. Ounissi recently confirmed
that the biggest discussion within Ennahda is the organization of the congress,
which has become required nationally, locally, and perhaps even regionally and internationally,
according to his estimates.
The movement was scheduled to hold the postponed congress in
June, but the arrest of Ghannouchi and other leaders of the movement prevented
that, in addition to the confiscation of the movement's headquarters.
Terrorism indictment
The coincidence between a petition gathered by the Tunisian
parliament to classify Ennahda as a terrorist group and the reopening of the
debate about the movement’s eleventh congress is an indication of the
movement's attempts to preempt any official decision against it.
Observers expect that the Tunisian authorities, led by
Tunisian President Kais Saied, will consider the opening of the file of the congress
that has been postponed for more than three years as a provocative step by
Ennahda and then call for an escalation against it, at a time when the current
interim leadership's ability to cope is not being tested.
Those of the second reading support that Ennahda should be
based on reading its previous choices and what it has reached instead of going
to its eleventh congress.
Sarah Brahmi, the daughter of assassinated Tunisian
politician Mohamed Brahmi, whom Ennahda was accused of killing in 2013, told
the Reference that Ennahda is prepared to do anything to return to power,
noting that the movement is taking every opportunity to do so.
She expected the movement to continue despite the Tunisian
state's attempts to pursue it.
The eleventh congress was postponed more than once, as it
was expected to take place at the end of 2020, had it not been for the situation
that Tunisia experienced against the background of the Covid-19 pandemic, as indicated
by Ennahda’s statement in November 2020.
Explaining the reasons for postponing the congress, analysts
recalled the differences that the movement has experienced since mid-2020
against the background of Ghannouchi’s desire to run for a third term, in
disagreement with Article 31 of the movement’s bylaws.
Against the backdrop of Ghannouchi’s intention to run, the movement
witnessed splits in its ranks, coinciding with conflicts it was experiencing
with the Tunisian administration, which ended in the decisions of July 25,
2022, and the movement’s overthrow by President Saied.