Tunisia arrests official from opposition Ennahda party

Tunisia arrests official from opposition Ennahda party
A leader in Tunisia's Ennahda party was arrested Saturday, the latest opposition official to be detained ahead of presidential elections this year.
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The government shut down Ennahda's offices across Tunisia after the party chief's detention last year [Getty/archive]

A leader of Tunisia's Islamist-inspired opposition party Ennahda was arrested Saturday, his party said in a statement on Facebook.

The party, whose chief Rached Ghannouchi has been in jail since April last year, did not give any reason for the arrest.

"Ajami Lourimi, the secretary-general of the Ennahda Party, was detained without judicial permission along with two companions in Borj Al Amrim," around 37 kilometres (23 miles) west of the capital Tunis, the statement said.

Ennahda was the largest party in parliament until President Kais Saied dissolved the legislature in July 2021.

He has since ruled by decree in the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring uprisings that swept the region more than a decade ago.

Last September, two leaders of Ennahda, former prime minister Hamadi Jebali and Mondher Ounissi, who had served as Ennahda's acting chairman since Ghannouchi's arrest, were arrested.

Saied's government closed Ennahda's offices across Tunisia after Ghannouchi's arrest over charges related to "terrorism".

He is the best-known opposition figure imprisoned in Tunisia since Saied dismissed parliament and seized all state power in 2021.

Ennahda had dominated Tunisian politics since the 2011 revolt that toppled the dictatorship of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and launched the region's Arab Spring revolts.

Ghannouchi was among more than 20 of Saied's political opponents and other prominent figures, including former ministers and business executives, arrested early last year.

The arrests came as the North African country readies for its general presidential elections, set to take place in October.

Saied has not yet announced if he will seek another term.

MENA
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