(Reuters) -
Tunisia's Ennahda party, the first Islamist movement to secure power
after the 2011 "Arab Spring" revolts, conceded defeat on Monday in
elections that are set to make its main secular rival the strongest
force in parliament. Official results from
Sunday's elections - the second parliamentary vote since Tunisians set
off uprisings across much of the Arab World by overthrowing autocrat
Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali - were still to be announced. But
a senior official at Ennahda, which ruled in a coalition until it was
forced to make way for a caretaker government during a political crisis
at the start of this year, acknowledged defeat by the secular Nidaa
Tounes party. "We have
accepted this result, and congratulate the winner Nidaa Tounes," the
official, Lotfi Zitoun, told Reuters. However, he repeated the party's
call for a new coalition including Ennahda. "We are calling once again
for the formation of a unity government in the interest of the country." Earlier,
a party source said preliminary tallies showed the secular party had
won 80 seats in the 217-member assembly, ahead of 67 secured by Ennahda.
"According to the
preliminary results, we are in the lead and in a comfortable position,"
one Nidaa Tounes official said, without confirming figures given by the
first source. One of the
most secular Arab countries, Tunisia has been hailed as an example of
political compromise after overcoming a crisis between the secular and
Islamist movements and approving a new constitution this year that
allowed the elections. Electoral
authorities were due to give preliminary results later on Monday, but
larger parties had observers at polling stations to oversee the initial
counts, allowing them to tally results unofficially. Ennahda,
which espouses a pragmatic form of political Islam, won Tunisia's first
free election in 2011 after Ben Ali fled protests against corruption
and repression, and went into exile in Saudi Arabia. The
party formed a coalition government with two secular partners but had
to stand aside in the crisis that erupted over the murder of two
opposition leaders by Islamist militants. During
campaigning Ennahda cast itself as a party that learned from its
mistakes, but Nidaa Tounes appeared to have capitalized on criticism
that it had mismanaged the economy and had been lax in tackling hardline
Islamists. BEN ALI REMNANTS A
Nidaa Tounes victory will open the way for the return of some Ben
Ali-era figures who have recast themselves as technocrats untainted by
the corruption of his regime, but possessing the administrative skills
to run the country. Since
its revolt, the small North African state has fared better than its
neighbors which also ousted long-ruling leaders during 2011, avoiding
the turmoil suffered by Egypt and the outright civil war of Syria and
chaos of Libya. Many
Tunisians are proud of their history of liberal education and women's
rights dating back to Habib Bourguiba, the first president after
independence from France, and Essebsi portrayed his party as the force
of modernity. But the
country also has an undercurrent of hardline, ultra-conservative Islam,
and security forces are engaged in a low intensity conflict with
militants. Tunisian
militant fighters have long been prominent among jihadis in foreign wars
dating back to the 1980s Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, and more
than 3,000 are estimated to be fighting for Islamic State now in Syria
and Iraq. Even with an
advantage over Ennahda, Nidaa Tounes will need to form a coalition with
other parties to reach a majority in the parliament and form a new
government. Ennahda may
still be part of any cabinet. Before the elections, the party had called
for a unity government to help Tunisia though the last stages of its
transition and deal with tough austerity measures to revive economic
growth. Led by Beji Caid
Essebsi, a former parliament speaker under Ben Ali, Nidaa Tounes emerged
in 2012 as a political force by rallying opposition to the first
Ennahda-led government when Islamists won around 40 percent of seats in
the first assembly. Nidaa Tounes drew from Ben Ali officials, smaller parties, and even union leaders to form an anti-Islamist front. But
Essebsi, a veteran politician since after independence, and Ennahda
leader Rached Ghannouchi, an Islamist scholar who spent decades in exile
in Britain, were also instrumental in the political compromise that
pulled Tunisia back from the brink. While
the role of Islam in politics overshadowed the first election in 2011,
jobs, economic opportunities and Tunisia's low-intensity conflict with
Islamist militants were the main concerns of a country heavily reliant
on foreign tourism.
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