Tunisia presidential runner calls for rival to be freed

Tunisian lawmakers during a plenary session at the parliament in the capital Tunis on July 28, 2018. (AFP)
  • Saied tops with 18.4% of votes while rival Karoui comes second with 15.6%

TUNIS: One of two presidential candidates to have won through to a runoff election in Tunisia has called for his rival to be released from prison.
“The situation leaves me morally uncomfortable ... I would sincerely like to see him freed, but the final word belongs to the judiciary,” law professor Kais Saied said in an interview on national television late on Thursday, referring to Nabil Karoui. Saied and media mogul Karoui were the two candidates to emerge from the first round of a presidential election held on Sept. 15, despite the latter being arrested in a money-laundering probe ahead of the campaign.
Saied topped the first round with 18.4 percent of votes, according to the elections commission ISIE, while Karoui came in second with 15.6 percent, out of a field of more than 20 candidates.

The dark horse
Saied, little known before the election, is a constitutional law professor who ran a modest campaign with next to no publicity or funding, espousing conservative social views while pushing for a return to the principles of the 2011 uprising.
Under investigation for a complaint lodged in 2016, Karoui was arrested days before the start of campaigning, prompting accusations that the timing was a manipulation of justice — a charge vehemently denied by Prime Minister Youssef Chahed.

FASTFACT

Saied, little known before the election, is a constitutional law professor who ran a modest campaign with next to no publicity or funding, espousing conservative social views while pushing for a return to the principles of the 2011 uprising.

Karoui, a well-known but controversial figure, was detained in a tax evasion and money laundering case brought three years ago by an independent transparency watchdog.
He is the owner of a major television news channel and founder of a large charity that serves Tunisia’s poor.
Karoui was unable to take part in televised debates before the vote, and electoral monitors have voiced concern that voters will not have a chance to hear him campaign.
But Saied said the opportunities were not unequal between the two candidates “Unlike others. I have no media to use, no television channels ... I have not campaigned,” he said.
Chahed likewise stood for the presidency in the Sept. 15 poll, but was knocked out of the running. The second round is due to take place in mid-October and a debate between Karoui and Saied is meant to air as part of the campaign. Both ISIE and broadcast regulator HAICA have requested that the judiciary authorize Karoui to take part in that debate. There has been no response from the judiciary. State television has said it is prepared to organize the debate within prison walls, if necessary.
Several foreign observer missions and defeated first round candidates have similarly called for Karoui to be allowed to campaign freely for the second round.
A decision on his possible release is expected next week.