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Tunisia's parliament speaker leaves hospital

Parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi
Parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi
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TUNIS: Tunisia's parliament speaker Rached Ghannouchi, head of Ennahda party that has had an influential national role for a decade, left the hospital hours after he was admitted on Sunday, two advisers said, in the midst of a major political crisis.


Ghannouchi, 80, has led opposition to last week's move by President Kais Saied to seize governing powers, dismiss the prime minister and freeze parliament, steps that the Ennahda leader quickly branded a coup.


His advisers did not say what was wrong with Ghannouchi, who was hospitalised for a week last month with Covid-19.


"After a few hours in the military hospital, Ghannouchi returned home and he is fine now", an advisor said.


Suppressed before the 2011 revolution that introduced democracy, Ennahda has since then been the most consistently powerful political party, backing successive coalition governments and helping to agree the 2014 constitution.


However, economic stagnation, declining services and a public perception of increased corruption have dented its support and Saied's sudden declaration on Sunday appears to have widespread backing.


Ghannouchi, who was also taken to hospital briefly on Saturday and later discharged, faces internal dissent within Ennahda over both his handling of the immediate crisis and his strategic choices since the 2019 election.


Party figures regard the current crisis as the biggest Ennahda has faced since 2011 and a growing number of members have called on Ghannouchi to quit. On Friday he postponed a meeting of the party's powerful Choura council at short notice.


Meanwhile, Tunisia's President Kais Saied said in a video published by his office on Sunday that there were contacts with "friendly countries" to cut the country's financial deficit, without giving details.


Tunisia's fiscal deficit and public debt both grew sharply last year as a result of the pandemic and the government has been in negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for a loan deal. - Reuters


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