After years
of authoritarian rule, Tunisia has inaugurated its first freely elected
president. Beji Caid Essibsi has long held office in Tunis, but insists his
administration will not be a continuation of the past.
Deutsche Welle, 31 Dec 2014
Beji Caid
Essebsi was sworn in as president of Tunisia on Wednesday in a plenary session
of parliament, where his secularist Nida Tounes party holds the largest bloc of
seats.
Essebsi is
the first democratically elected head of state in the north African country
since it gained independence from France in 1956. The 88-year-old veteran of
Tunisian politics won 55.68 percent of the votes cast in a run-off election on
December 21.
After his
swearing-in ceremony was compete, Essebsi was to travel to the presidential
palace in Carthage, a suburb of Tunis, for a formal hand over of power from
former President Moncef Marouki.
Nida Tounes
defeated rival moderate Islamist party Ennahda, to which Marzouki belongs.
Marzouki received 44.32 percent of the vote, and his party said it had not
ruled out joining a coalition government coming second in the October
parliamentary vote.
A
'president for all Tunisians'
Tunisia had
only two heads of state between gaing its independence from French colonial
rule in 1957 and its revolution nearly four years ago. Habib Bourguiba, a
nationalist leader who spearheaded the nation's independence, ruled Tunisia as
president for 30 years, before Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who was overthrown in the
Arab spring revolts in 2011 took power. Essebsi served under both, and has been
accused by his detractors as being an extension of the Ben Ali regime.
Essebsi has
denied these accusations, saying he would be a "president for all
Tunisians," adding that Tunisia had turned a page on the past and should
look to the future.
Tunisia is
the birthplace of the Arab Spring and largely considered its sole success story. Similar uprisings in Libya, Syria, and Yemen have all led to protracted
conflicts, while Egypt saw its elected leader, Islamist President Mohammed
Morsi, deposed by the army after a year in power.
es/pfd (AFP, dpa)

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