Tunisia’s Ennahda faces probe into electoral foreign funding
Investigation also includes Heart of Tunisia Party and Aish Tounsi association
TUNIS, Tunisia
An investigation has been launched into charges against the Ennahda and Heart of Tunisia parties of “receiving foreign funding” during the 2019 campaign for parliamentary elections, a Tunisian spokesman said on Wednesday.
Mohsen al-Dali, a spokesman for the Court of First Instance in Tunis, told Anadolu Agency that an investigative judge opened an investigation on July 14 into charges of "receiving foreign funding".
He stated that the investigation include Ennahda Party, which holds 53 seats in the 217-member parliament, Heart of Tunisia Party (28 seats), and the Aish Tounsi association, which has one seat.
“The penalties in such cases are according to the judges' jurisprudence, and may amount to a travel ban, arrest, and freezing of funds,” the spokesman said.
The Ennahda Party, Heart of Tunisia Party and the Aish Tounsi association had previously denied receiving "foreign funding".
On Sunday, Tunisian President Kais Saied dismissed the government of Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, froze parliament and assumed executive authority with the assistance of a new prime minister.
The move was rejected by most of Tunisia’s parliamentary blocs, including Ennahda, Heart of Tunisia, the Dignity Coalition and the People's Movement.
Ennahda leader and Parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi decried Saied’s move as nothing but a "full-fledged coup" against the Tunisian constitution, revolution and freedoms in the country.
Tunisia is seen as the only country that succeeded in carrying out a democratic transition among a group of Arab countries that witnessed popular revolutions which toppled their ruling regimes, including Egypt, Libya and Yemen.
*Writing by Mahmoud Barakat
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