Maghreb

Painful end for the Brotherhood in Tunisia… demands to dissolve Ennahdha movement after the arrest of Ghannouchi


Ennahdha is in deep disarray in Tunisia after Tunisian security forces arrested Ennahdha leader Rached Ghannouchi on judicial warrants pending investigation into inflammatory statements he made and pending action.

Civil war

Ghannouchi has reportedly brandished a so-called “civil war” in Tunisia; He was also arrested by the Tunisian security forces, amid widespread Tunisian demands to disband the Muslim Brotherhood’s Ennahdha movement for its involvement in many terrorist crimes.

Cao’s state

Tunisian political analyst Oussama Aouidet said: “Ennahdha has entered a state of weakness from within, since the July 25th movement, and with the addition of the arrest of Rached Ghannouchi, who is being held in flagrante delicto, for declaring a civil war in Tunisia, that in the sense of the judiciary is a continuous state of confusion, not an immediate state of confusion, in addition to the heavy files that are following this man and his party or the Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia from assassinations of leaders, in addition to political responsibility and the economic situation that Tunisia has reached in the past ten years.”

He added: All these files are now gathering against the man, and he will be judicially held accountable first and organizationally second. He clarified that the Muslim Brotherhood now has no place in Tunisia, and that this stance on the political level recognizes that the Muslim Brotherhood has ended its time in Tunisia, and that they have pronounced on the Tunisian people.

Dissolution of Ennahdha Movement

He added that urgent and immediate action is needed to dissolve this Muslim Brotherhood movement because it is accused of many terrorist crimes that must be dissolved and its political activity banned for good, especially that its members are involved in several cases related to terrorism, political assassinations and receiving funds from abroad in contravention of the country’s security.

Tunisian parties accused Ennahdha of supporting terrorism during its post-2011 rule, urging young people in mosques and special meetings to join terrorist groups in Syria, and implicating youth in the exodus of hundreds of religious associations in Tunisia linked to Ennahdha and the Muslim Brotherhood. Dozens of them were disbanded after they were proven to be linked to terrorist acts.

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