(Reuters) - A
former Tunisian interior minister has been nominated as prime minister
to form a new government after an agreement among political parties in
the newly elected parliament, congress speaker Mohamed Nacer said on
Monday. The nominee, Habib
Essid, worked in the government of autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali but
was also interior minister after the 2011 revolution that ended Ben
Ali's one-party rule and forced him into exile.
His nomination follows the election of Beji Caid Essebsi, also a former
Ben Ali minister, as president. Essebi's secular Nidaa Tounes party
holds the most seats in the new parliament. "We have chosen Essid because he is independent and has experience in the areas of security and the economy," Nacer told reporters outside the congressional palace. He will now appoint a government that must then be approved by a vote in the parliament. Tunisia
has been praised as a model for its transition to democracy and its new
constitution and free elections held since the 2011 uprising. The North
African state has mostly avoided the political strife faced by other
Arab Spring nations. Essid,
a U.S.-educated agricultural economist, joins other former government
officials making a comeback though the ballot box after parliamentary
and presidential elections since October that were the final steps to
full democracy. Critics worry their return is a setback for the 2011
revolution. President
Essebsi promises to govern for all Tunisians and says he has the
technocrat background to manage security and economic challenges.
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