The Japan Times - Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback

EUR -
AED 4.311008
AFN 75.113687
ALL 96.078618
AMD 440.343353
ANG 2.100705
AOA 1076.240939
ARS 1590.02147
AUD 1.655132
AWG 2.114045
AZN 1.995162
BAM 1.960978
BBD 2.361547
BDT 144.190751
BGN 1.957775
BHD 0.442858
BIF 3485.752856
BMD 1.173654
BND 1.495545
BOB 8.101358
BRL 5.861181
BSD 1.172546
BTN 109.363115
BWP 15.805544
BYN 3.345378
BYR 23003.621543
BZD 2.358127
CAD 1.619114
CDF 2711.140411
CHF 0.92119
CLF 0.026709
CLP 1051.265331
CNY 8.01653
CNH 8.004656
COP 4223.476652
CRC 541.760581
CUC 1.173654
CUP 31.101835
CVE 110.913197
CZK 24.367935
DJF 208.581473
DKK 7.47221
DOP 70.008823
DZD 155.092335
EGP 62.373221
ERN 17.604812
ETB 183.987228
FJD 2.590373
FKP 0.872286
GBP 0.870088
GEL 3.157605
GGP 0.872286
GHS 12.933839
GIP 0.872286
GMD 85.676696
GNF 10298.81512
GTQ 8.969647
GYD 245.296687
HKD 9.191356
HNL 31.145366
HRK 7.535914
HTG 153.545265
HUF 362.710785
IDR 20100.353246
ILS 3.574252
IMP 0.872286
INR 110.354416
IQD 1535.988662
IRR 1544675.581606
ISK 143.408527
JEP 0.872286
JMD 185.098235
JOD 0.832075
JPY 187.03177
KES 151.836032
KGS 102.635883
KHR 4695.69957
KMF 492.935213
KPW 1056.288296
KRW 1737.500608
KWD 0.362389
KYD 0.977113
KZT 557.240445
LAK 25856.718071
LBP 104976.159314
LKR 369.994893
LRD 215.734265
LSL 19.375243
LTL 3.465496
LVL 0.709931
LYD 7.448987
MAD 10.892115
MDL 20.033572
MGA 4867.100923
MKD 61.643097
MMK 2465.023699
MNT 4193.906077
MOP 9.457515
MRU 46.789343
MUR 54.64519
MVR 18.145414
MWK 2033.172753
MXN 20.309378
MYR 4.665341
MZN 75.055501
NAD 19.379133
NGN 1595.33611
NIO 43.146691
NOK 11.096859
NPR 174.986763
NZD 2.001509
OMR 0.451269
PAB 1.172491
PEN 3.975399
PGK 5.153002
PHP 70.52781
PKR 327.044716
PLN 4.242865
PYG 7517.170145
QAR 4.274268
RON 5.089668
RSD 117.361851
RUB 89.404632
RWF 1717.122029
SAR 4.404542
SBD 9.45748
SCR 16.335179
SDG 705.365863
SEK 10.79354
SGD 1.494232
SHP 0.876251
SLE 28.901205
SLL 24610.936416
SOS 670.103738
SRD 43.932199
STD 24292.271521
STN 24.566335
SVC 10.259309
SYP 129.722273
SZL 19.365126
THB 37.631971
TJS 11.115188
TMT 4.113658
TND 3.42152
TOP 2.825878
TRY 52.473961
TTD 7.962297
TWD 37.180162
TZS 3054.108645
UAH 50.939515
UGX 4379.546006
USD 1.173654
UYU 47.314738
UZS 14221.796538
VES 558.46901
VND 30917.571546
VUV 140.027942
WST 3.209345
XAF 657.727425
XAG 0.015599
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.171859
XCG 2.113125
XDR 0.818002
XOF 657.721806
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.332422
ZAR 19.263771
ZMK 10564.339503
ZMW 22.306949
ZWL 377.916161
  • CMSC

    0.0150

    22.445

    +0.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0580

    22.688

    +0.26%

  • BCC

    0.4750

    80.645

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    0.1550

    23.505

    +0.66%

  • RIO

    0.6800

    98.94

    +0.69%

  • BP

    -0.1300

    46.31

    -0.28%

  • NGG

    -1.2900

    89

    -1.45%

  • AZN

    -1.2650

    202.765

    -0.62%

  • GSK

    0.7250

    58.935

    +1.23%

  • BTI

    -0.1100

    58.7

    -0.19%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.94

    -0.62%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • VOD

    -0.0650

    15.625

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    0.9450

    34.245

    +2.76%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback
Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback / Photo: FETHI BELAID - AFP/File

Once a leading force, battered Tunisian party awaits elusive comeback

The party that once dominated Tunisian politics has faded away since President Kais Saied staged a dramatic power grab, with its offices shuttered and leaders behind bars or in exile.

Text size:

But observers say that Ennahdha, the Islamist-inspired movement still considered by some Tunisians as the country's main opposition party, could still bounce back after a devastating government crackdown.

On July 25, 2021, Saied stunned the country when he suspended parliament and dissolved the government, a move critics denounced as a "coup" a decade after the Arab Spring revolt ushered in a democratic transition in the North African country.

Many of Saied's critics have been prosecuted and jailed, including Ennahdha leader Rached Ghannouchi, 84, a former parliament speaker who was sentenced earlier this month to 14 years in prison for plotting against the state.

Ghannouchi, who was arrested in 2023, has racked up several prison terms, including a 22-year sentence handed in February on the same charge.

The crackdown over the past four years has seen around 150 Ennahdha figures imprisoned, prosecuted or living in exile, according to a party official.

"Some believe the movement is dead, but that is not the case," said political scientist Slaheddine Jourchi.

Ennahdha has been "weakened to the point of clinical death" but remained the most prominent party in Tunisia's "fragmented and fragile" opposition, Jourchi added.

- 'Once we're free again' -

Riadh Chaibi, a party official and adviser to Ghannouchi, said that even after "shrinking" its political platform, Ennahdah was still a relevant opposition outlet.

"Despite repression, prosecutions and imprisonment" since 2021, "Ennahdha remains the country's largest political movement," Chaibi said.

He said the current government has been "weaponising state institutions to eliminate political opponents", but "once we're free again, like we were in 2011, Ennahdha will regain its strength".

Since 2011, when Ghannouchi returned from exile to lead the party, Ennahdha for years had a key role in Tunisian politics, holding the premiership and other senior roles.

But by 2019, the year Saied was elected president, the party's popularity had already begun waning, winning only a third of the 1.5 million votes it had in 2011.

Experts ascribed this trend to the party's failure to improve living standards and address pressing socio-economic issues.

Ennahdha has also been accused of jihadist links, which it has repeatedly denied.

Saied, who religiously avoids mentioning either Ennahdha or Ghannouchi by name, has often referred to the party's years in power as "the black decade" and accused it of committing "crimes against the country".

Crowds of Tunisians, increasingly disillusioned as a political deadlock trumped Ennahdha's promise of change, poured into the streets in celebration when Saied forced the party out of the halls of power in 2021.

Analyst Jourchi said Ennahdha's rise to power was a "poorly prepared adventure", and the party had "made many mistakes along the way".

Left-wing politician Mongi Rahoui said it was "only natural that Ennahdha leaders and their governing partners be prosecuted for crimes they used their political position to commit".

Today, the party's activities have been reduced mostly to issuing statements online, often reacting to prison sentences handed down to critics of Saied.

- 'Silence everything' -

But Ennahdha has weathered repression before, harshly suppressed under Tunisia's autocratic presidents Habib Bourguiba and Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

Party leaders were jailed or forced into exile, and Ghannouchi was sentenced to life in prison under Bourguiba but then freed -- and later exiled -- under Ben Ali.

Tunisian historian Abdellatif Hannachi said that the party "seems to be bending with the wind, waiting for changes that would allow it to return".

It has been in "clear decline", he added, but "that does not mean it's disappearing."

Ennahdha's downfall was not an isolated case. Other opposition forces have also been crushed, and dozens of political, media and business figures are currently behind bars.

"This regime no longer distinguishes between Islamist and secular, progressive and conservative," rights advocate Kamel Jendoubi, a former minister, recently said in a Facebook post.

Saied's government "wants to silence everything that thinks, that criticises, or resists", Jendoubi argued.

The opposition, however, remains fractured, failing for example to come together in rallies planned for the anniversary this month of Saied's power grab.

T.Ueda--JT