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Tunisia’s interim finance minister quits over conflict of interests case

Tunisia’s interim finance minister quits over conflict of interests case
A vendor sells fish to customers at a central market in Mehdia, Tunisia. (Reuters)
Updated 19 August 2017

Tunisia’s interim finance minister quits over conflict of interests case

Tunisia’s interim finance minister quits over conflict of interests case

TUNIS: Fadhel Abdelkefi, Tunisia’s interim finance minister, told local radio on Friday that he was resigning from the government over a conflict of interests case in which he has been fined and handed a suspended prison sentence.
Abdelkefi is a key member of Prime Minister Youssef Chahed’s government, which is under pressure to carry out contentious economic reforms demanded by international lenders and cut its budget deficit.
Announcing his resignation, Abdelkefi told Tunisia’s Mosaique FM that he wanted to defend himself as an ordinary citizen, not a minister.
He said he would continue in his post until an expected cabinet reshuffle. He faces a judicial hearing on Sept. 4.
Chahed told reporters shortly afterwards that he had accepted the resignation, but had asked Abdelkefi to stay in post until a replacement was found.
Abdelkefi had been serving since last year as minister for development, investment and international cooperation in Chahed’s government.
He became acting finance minister in April, replacing Lamia Zribi who had faced criticism from political opponents over the sharp fall in the Tunisian dinar and slow progress in economic reforms.
The judicial case involves foreign currency payments that were investigated by Tunisia’s customs department. Abdelkefi heads the customs department in his position as acting finance minister.
While Tunisia has been praised for its democratic progress in the past six years, successive governments have failed to push through painful reforms needed to overhaul public spending.