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Local Editor | |||||
Tunisia's main political parties failed to agree on forming
a non-partisan cabinet to tackle the turmoil triggered following the
assassination of the opposition leader Chokri Belaid, Prime Minister Hamadi
Jebali said on Monday. But he said efforts would continue to form a government supported by most parties in the North African state that spawned the chain of popular uprisings against dictatorship across the Arab world two years ago. "The initiative for a cabinet of technocrats did not receive full political consensus and has failed...But work is continuing with all parties to form a government which has the agreement of most of the political parties," Jebali told a news conference. He spoke after a meeting with leaders of secular political parties and his own Islamist Ennahda party, which has denied any involvement in Belaid's killing. Jebali suggested a cabinet of apolitical technocrats to help restore calm and guide Tunisia to elections. He had threatened to quit if his proposal failed but on Monday he said only: "I will meet the president tomorrow to discuss the next steps." The political crisis has disrupted efforts to revitalize an economy that was hard-hit by the disorder that followed the overthrow of veteran strongman Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011. Ennahda party chief Rached Ghannouchi told Reuters it was essential that Islamists and secular parties shared power now and in the future. "Any stable rule in Tunisia needs a moderate Islamist-secular coalition," he said. Ghannouchi said Ennahda might compromise over control of portfolios such as defense, foreign affairs, justice and interior. "We are ready to discuss all ministries, including sovereign ones, in a new coalition government." Violent protests, in which one policeman was killed, swept Tunisia after Belaid's assassination, with crowds attacking Ennahda offices in Tunis and elsewhere. Tens of thousands of people turned out for the slain leader's funeral on Friday. | |||||
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