(Reuters) -
Tunisian Prime Minister-designate Habib Essid said on Friday he had
formed a government without any cabinet posts for moderate Islamists
after negotiations among secular party Nidaa Tounes and other smaller
partners in parliament. The full assembly must
now vote to ratify the new cabinet. Nidaa Tounes won the most seats in
the October election, one of the last steps in Tunisia's path to full
democracy after its 2011 popular uprising. Essid
named Farhat Hacheni as defense minister and handed the finance
portfolio to Lassaad Zarrouk, an independent economist and director of
an insurance company. Taieb Baccouche, a leading member of Nidaa Tounes,
will be foreign minister. "They
will work on the program of Nidaa Tounes with the help of the other
parties. It is a government for all Tunisians to apply democracy," Essid
said. The Islamist party
Ennahda, with the second largest number of seats in the assembly, had
sought a unity government with Nidaa Tounes to improve stability with
the new government set to crack down on Islamist militants and tackle
economic reforms. Nidaa
Tounes leaders had not openly opposed a unity administration. But Nidaa
Tounes hardliners were against any alliance with Ennahda, who they blame
for turmoil during the first Islamist-led government after the 2011
uprising. Ennahda party leaders were consulting on Friday on whether to accept the new government. Since
the fall of autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisian politics has
often been dominated by compromises between secular and Islamist leaders
to helped keep democratization on track. No
party has an outright majority in the new parliament, meaning political
bargains and deal-making are needed to form coalitions and decide on
government posts. One of the most secular countries in the Arab world, Tunisia
has been held up as example of peaceful democratic evolution in an
otherwise violence-ridden region, with free elections and a new
constitution four years after Ben Ali's overthrow.
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