Policy

How do Tunisia’s Muslim brotherhood maintain its electoral balance? Abir Moussi answers


The President of the Free Destourian Party, Abir Moussi, has reopened the file of foreign funding for Tunisian associations and parties to achieve electoral gains.

Moussi called for a halt to funding Tunisian associations with corrupt and foreign money, which would then be transferred to political parties in order to attract voters, Shems FM reported on its website.

Abir Moussi said at a press conference organized by the Free Constitutional Party: “The Muslim Brotherhood octopus are infiltrating popular neighborhoods, and they have lists of voters who provide them with money and whose votes are automatically transferred to the Brotherhood”.

“The current government, no matter how many laws it changes, will have a strong electoral balance in those neighborhoods”, she said. “They are providing social guarantees for voters there through the microfinance program, a Brotherhood program”.

The head of the Free Destourian Party called for drying up the sources of suspicious associations belonging to Rached Ghannouchi.

Moussi explained that Tunisia has not experienced real democracy in the last 10 years, but rather chaos and partisan quotas.

On the national dialog, she said: “This dialog is just a waste of time and another opportunity for the losers and the country’s destroyers, the Muslim Brotherhood and the corrupt, to return and impose their visions and divide the pie among themselves”.

“Dialog is not a solution, and it is a defense of a system that has failed, refuses to leave, and wants to restore itself”, she said.

She also pointed to “the purification of the electoral climate”, saying that “changing the composition of the electoral commission will link it with the executive branch, and will thus move from the consensus and to the authority of President Kais Saied”.

On Thursday, the July 25 movement in Tunisia demanded the dissolution of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Renaissance Movement, considering it a terrorist movement, which caused the destruction of the country and the bankruptcy of the state.

On March 30, Tunisian President Kais Saied announced the dissolution of the frozen parliament, following an attempted revolt led by the Muslim Brotherhood’s Ennahdha movement.

Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button
Verified by MonsterInsights