Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki (R) meets with Prime
Minister-designate Ali Larayedh in Tunis
REUTERS
Independents will take over the foreign and defense ministries in
Tunisia's new government under a deal by the ruling Islamist party to
cede key portfolios following violent unrest over the assassination of a
secular opposition leader.
President Moncef Marzouki asked Interior Minister Ali Larayedh of the
Islamist Ennahda party on February 22 to form a government within 15
days after Ennahda Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali resigned.
Coalition sources said Othman Jarandi, a former Tunisian ambassador to
the United Nations, Oman, South Korea and Pakistan, had been named as
foreign minister to capitalize on his strong ties with international
bodies and the West.
Tunisia needs to negotiate a $1.78 billion loan from the International
Monetary Fund. The political turmoil has set back that quest and
prompted Standard and Poor's lower its long-term foreign and local
currency sovereign credit rating of Tunisia.
"There is a preliminary agreement that Othman Jarandi will be foreign
minister, and Abdelhak Lassoued will replace the current defence
minister, Abdelkarim Zbidi, who wants to leave," a coalition source told
Reuters. A second source confirmed the development but declined to give
details.
Lassoued, 76, has not held a cabinet post before but served in the
civil service under Tunisia's first post-independence president, Habib
Bourguiba.
Ennahda said last week it would allow independent figures to take over
key ministries in the next government in a concession to the
non-Islamist opposition.
At least 10 members of Jebali's former cabinet will stay on, including
Mohamed Ben Salem as agriculture minister and Samir Dilou as human
rights minister - both members of Ennahda, as well as Culture Minister
Mehdi Mabrouk, an independent.
Zbidi had held the defence portfolio since shortly after Tunisia's
January 2011 popular revolution that ousted veteran dictator Zine
al-Abidine Ben Ali. Under Zbidi, the military helped keep public order
while staying out of politics.
Tunisia plunged into political crisis a month ago when the
assassination of secular opposition politician Chokri Belaid ignited the
biggest street protests since Ben Ali's overthrow.
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