Tunisia's
Islamist Prime Minister Ali Larayedh resigned on Thursday to make way for a
caretaker government as part of a deal with his opponents to finish a
transitional period.
“I have just
handed my resignation to the president,” Larayedh told reporters, in statements
carried by Reuters. “I hope the country will be a model for democratic
transition,” he added.
Larayedh
hails from Tunisia’s moderate Islamist Ennahda Party.
He is to be
replaced within 15 days by premier designate Mehdi Jomaa at the head of a
government of technocrats that will lead the country to fresh elections under a
new constitution.
Larayedh
agreed to step down following lengthy negotiations with the opposition,
triggered by a political crisis that gripped the country since the assassination
of a leftist politician in July.
The
resignation of the Ennahda-led government has been seen as an implicit
admission of the Islamists' failure to manage the transition following the 2011
overthrow of Tunisia's Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Tunisia's
assembly is in the process of approving a new constitution, and elections for a
new government will be held this year.
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