Will Tunisia follow Egypt’s June 30 footsteps to overthrow Turkish-Muslim Brotherhood alliance?
Turkey, headed by Receop
Tayyip Erdogan since 2011, has been continuously using its support for
political Islamist groups to expand their sphere of influence in the North
African region, including Tunisia.
As Parliament speaker Rachid
Ghannouchi, the leader of Ennahda and a close friend of Erdogan in the Muslim
Brotherhood network, made a “mysterious” visit to Turkey, political and legal
activists have launched an online popular campaign that demands the ouster of
Ghannouchi from his position.
This step is very similar to
what happened in Egypt during the Muslim Brotherhood ruling when Tamarod, an
Egyptian grassroots movement, was founded to register opposition to President
Mohamed Morsi and force him to call early presidential elections.
In Tunisia, thousands of
Tunisians signed forms that called for the dismissal of Ghannouchi from being
speaker of the Parliament, especially after heavy criticism after a closed
meeting between him and Erdogan in Istanbul.
Ghannouchi secured the post
with 123 votes from 217 votes cast in parliament, following an agreement with
the liberal Qalb Tounes party headed by controversial businessman Nabil Karoui
The online campaign, which
witnessed the signing of more than 16 thousand signatures within the first few
hours of launching, said the men and women of Tunisia demands every free woman,
man and honest parliament member to sign our demands to dismiss Ghannouchi from
his position. “Long Live Tunisia,” the campaign concluded.
The suspicious meeting
between Ghannouchi and Erdogan also infuriated citizens and activists as it
comes a while after Libya's interior minister and Parliament asked Turkey for
military support and Turkey’s parliament approved a bill that allows troops to
be deployed to Libya in support of the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated
Tripoli-based government in the country.
Activists demanded a
no-confidence vote against Ghannouchi after accusing him of being dependent on
foreign and regional policies and seek help from Turkey to alleviate the defeat
suffered by the overthrow of the government presented by Ennahda.
The signature campaign,
which was welcomed by the Tunisian public opinion, coincided with actual movements
that was started by the Free Destourian Party for the same goal of ousting
Ghannouchi.
MP Al-Munagi Al-Rahawi has
said the situation is delicate in Tunisia as it is very sensitive in Libya.
“All developments are indicative of complications that require a lot of caution
and attention.”
He also demanded President
Kais Saied of questioning Ghannouchi who conducted the meeting with Erdogan
secretly without Saied knowing.
Ennahda claimed that
Ghannouchi visited Erdogan as he found it an opportunity to congratulate him on
the manufacture of Turkey’s first indigenous car, the matter which drew
criticism by Tunisians who demanded an end to the manipulations practiced by
Ennahda and its failure to form a government that would take the interests and
future of Tunisia into consideration.
Tunisian journalist and
human rights advocate Naziha Réjiba mocked Erdogan “and his car” in a Twitter
post after Ennahda’s justification, as well as whoever seeks to “make fools out
of Tunisians.”