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Tunisia sets presidential election runoff for October 13

Tunisia sets presidential election runoff for October 13
A man watches campaign posters for the upcoming parliament elections outside Tunis Tuesday Oct.1, 2019. (AP)
Updated 03 October 2019

Tunisia sets presidential election runoff for October 13

Tunisia sets presidential election runoff for October 13
  • ISIE said campaigning would kick off Thursday for the final round of voting, which will see imprisoned media mogul Nabil Karoui face off against independent law professor Kais Saied
  • That came as Tunisia’s court of appeal rejected a fresh request for Karoui’s release

TUNIS: Tunisia’s electoral commission said Wednesday the country’s presidential election runoff would take place on October 13 despite calls to postpone the vote by the party of a jailed frontrunner.
ISIE said campaigning would kick off Thursday for the second and final round of voting, which will see imprisoned media mogul Nabil Karoui face off against independent law professor Kais Saied.
“ISIE can neither advance nor postpone the date of the elections under the constitution,” commission head Nabil Baffoun said.
The spokesman for Karoui, who has been detained since August 23 on charges of money laundering and tax evasion, had called Tuesday night for a suspension of the vote as long as the candidate remains behind bars.
That came as Tunisia’s court of appeal rejected a fresh request for Karoui’s release.
ISIE, international observers and political leaders have called for Karoui to be allowed to campaign fairly.
“We have made every effort to ensure equal opportunities,” Baffoun said.
“We sent letters to the justice ministry, the prosecutor general and even the judge in charge of the case to give Nabil Karoui the opportunity to speak in the media, or even to release him.”
The timing of Karoui’s arrest, 10 days before the start of campaigning, raised questions about the politicization of the judicial process.
Despite the legal proceedings, Karoui’s candidacy was approved by ISIE and he campaigned by proxy via the Nessma television channel he founded and through his wife.
After the first round of voting on September 15, Saied led with 18.4 percent of votes, according to ISIE, with Karoui in second with 15.6 percent.