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Rached Ghannouchi

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Rached Ghannouchi
راشد الغنوشي
Ghannouchi in 2017
2ndSpeaker of the Assembly of the Representatives of the People
In office
13 November 2019 – 25 July 2021
PresidentKais Saied
Prime MinisterYoussef Chahed
Elyes Fakhfakh
Hichem Mechichi
Preceded byAbdelfattah Mourou(interim)
Succeeded byIbrahim Bouderbala
President of theEnnahda Movement
Assumed office
November 1991
Preceded byWalid Bennani
Personal details
Born
Rashad Khriji

(1941-06-22)22 June 1941(age 83)
El Hamma,French Tunisia
Political partyEnnahda Movement
Parent
  • Sheikh Muhammad (father)
Alma materCairo University
Damascus University
Websitewww.rachedelghannouchi.com

Rached Ghannouchi(Arabic:راشد الغنوشي,romanized:Rāshid al-Ghannūshī;born 22 June 1941[1]), also spelledRachid al-GhannouchiorRached el-Ghannouchi,is aTunisianpolitician,[2]the co-founder of theEnnahdha Partyand serving as its intellectual leader.[3]He was bornRashad Khriji(راشد الخريجي).[4]

Ghannouchi was named one ofTime's100 Most Influential People in the Worldin 2012[5]andForeign Policy's Top 100 Global Thinkers[6]and was awarded theChatham House Prizein 2012 (alongside Tunisian PresidentMoncef Marzouki) byPrince Andrew, Duke of York,for "the successful compromises each achieved during Tunisia's democratic transition".[7][8]In 2016, he received theJamnalal Bajaj Awardfor "promotingGandhianvalues outsideIndia".[9]On 13 November 2019, Ghannouchi was electedSpeaker of the Assembly of the Representatives of the People.[10]Ghannouchi narrowly survived a vote of no confidence after 97 MPs voted against him on 30 July 2020, falling short of 109 needed to oust him as Speaker of the House.[11]

Early life

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Ghannouchi in 1967.

Ghannouchi was born outsideEl Hamma,in thegovernorate of Gabèsin southern Tunisia. His village had no electricity or paved roads. His father was a poor farmer with children including Rached. His family worked in the fields every day, and had meat to eat only a few times a year.[12]After the ground season had ended, the family wove baskets from palm leaves to supplement its income. Rached was able to attend a local branch of the traditional Arabic-language Zaytouna school thanks to financial help from an older brother.[12]

He received his certificate of attainment degree, equivalent to theBaccalauréat,in 1962 from theUniversity of Ez-Zitouna(Zaytouna). He entered the school ofagricultureatCairo Universityin 1964 but, following the expulsion of Tunisians fromEgypt,he left forSyria.He studiedphilosophyat theUniversity of Damascus,graduating in 1968. Ghannouchi also spent some time in his 20s traveling and working in Europe as a grape picker and dish washer.[13]

Islamic Tendency Movement

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In April 1981 Ghannouchi founded the Islamic Tendency Movement (Arabic:حركة الاتجاه الإسلاميḤarakat al-Ittijāh al-Islāmī). The Movement described itself as specifically rooted innon-violentIslamism,and called for a "reconstruction of economic life on a more equitable basis, the end of single-party politics and the acceptance of political pluralism and democracy."[14]By the end of July, Ghannouchi and his followers were arrested, sentenced to eleven years in prison inBizerte,and were tortured. Both the religious and secular community, including numerous secular political organizations, rallied in his support.[15] While in prison he translated a number of works and wrote on topics such as democracy, women's rights, and Palestine. He also wrote his most noted work,Al‐Hurriyat al‐'Ammah(Public Liberties).[16]

He was released in 1984, but returned to prison in 1987 with a life sentence, then was again released in 1988. He moved to theUnited Kingdomas a political exile, where he lived for 22 years.[17][3]

He attended The Islamic Committee for Palestine conference in Chicago in 1989.[18]Following the 1990 invasion of Kuwait, Al-Ghannushi denounced King Fahd of Saudi Arabia for the "colossal crime" of inviting the U.S. to deploy forces.[19]He also called for a Muslim boycott of American goods, planes and ships.[19] He has also been criticized for calling for jihad against Israel.[20][21][22]

Rachid Al-Ghannouchi speaking in an Islamist rally circa 1980.

Ghannouchi continued to criticiseTunisian politicsand the regime of PresidentZine El Abidine Ben Ali.[23]

Tunisian Revolution and after

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Followingpopular unrestin which Ben Ali was ousted, Ghannouchi returned to Tunisia on 30 January 2011, after spending twenty two years exiled inLondon,[24]with thousands[25]of people welcoming him.

His party won 37.04% of the vote (more than the next four biggest vote-getting parties combined)[26]in the 2011Tunisian Constituent Assembly election. Ghannouchi did not take a government position. Ennahdha's secretary-generalHamadi JebalibecamePrime Minister.[27]

Ennahda formed a government which led Tunisia through the challenging and tumultuous aftermath of theJasmine revolution.The government during this period was characterized by greater transparency, lack of corruption, and consensus-building. In March 2012, Ennahda declared it would not support making sharia the main source of legislation in the new constitution, maintaining the secular nature of the state. Ennahda's stance on the issue was criticized by hardline Islamists, who wanted strict sharia, but was welcomed by secular parties.[28]The government was criticized for mediocre economic performance, not stimulating the tourism industry, and poor relations with Tunisia's biggest trading partner France. In particular it was criticized for tolerating efforts at aggressive Islamisation by radical Islamists who were demanding Sharia law and denouncing gender equality and restrictions on polygamy,[29]some of whom were responsible for the September 2012 ransacking and burning of the American embassy and school following the assassination of two leftist politiciansChokri Belaid(in February 2013) andMohamed Brahmi(in July 2013). During this2013–14 Tunisian political crisisenraged secularists demanded the government step down or even a Sisi-style coup, while Ennahda militants defiantly opposed early elections, even booing Ghannouchi's calls for sacrifice for national unity.[30]

Nonetheless Ghanouchi worked with secularist leaderBeji Caid Essebsito forge a compromise and on October 5 signed a "road map" whereby Ennahda would step down for a caretaker government after the new constitution was agreed upon and until new elections were held.[31]Both leaders were heavily criticized by their party rank and file and Ghannouchi received agreement from the Ennahda shura council only by threatening to resign.[32]

In January 2014, after the new Tunisian Constitution was approved, Ennahdha peacefully quit government and handed power to a technocratic government led byMehdi Jomaa.Ennahda placed second in theOctober 2014 parliamentary electionwith 27.79% of the popular vote and formed a coalition government with the larger secularist partyNidaa Tounesdespite rank-and-file opposition.[33]Ennahda did not put forth a presidential candidate for the November 2014 election.[34]Ghanouchi "hinted broadly" that he personally supported Beji Caid Essebsi[35](who won with over 55% of the vote).

Ghannouchi argued for these accommodating measures against more purist party members on the grounds that the country was still too fragile, and the economy too much in need of reform, for Ennahda to be in opposition.[33]Ghannouchi also gave his support to a crackdown on jihadi indoctrination at radical mosques (over 60 civilians, mostly tourists, werekilledin 2015 by jihadis, devastating Tunisia's tourist industry). Despite his Islamist background, he had always been "reviled" by jihadis, according to Robert Worth, and now appeared near "the top" of the jihadi "wanted list".[36]

Retracted allegations

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On 22 October 2011,The Economistpublished an apology on their website for previously publishing an article in which they attributed false statements to Ghannouchi. The article[37]claimed that Ghannouchi "opposes the country's liberal code of individual rights, the Code of Personal Status, and its prohibition of polygamy". The article, also, claimed that Ghannouchi "has threatened to hang a prominent Tunisian feminist, Raja bin Salama, in Basij Square in Tunis, because she has called for the country's new laws to be based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights". The apology[38]stated that "we accept that neither of these statements is true: Mr Ghannouchi has expressly said that he accepts the Code of Personal Status; and he never threatened to hang Ms bin Salama. We apologise to him unreservedly."

On 9 October 2012,The Independentpublished an apology[39]on their website for suggesting in a previous article that the Ennahdha Party has been offered foreign funds. The apology stated: "we wish to make it clear that Mr. Ghannouchi and his party have not accepted any donation from a foreign state in breach of Tunisian party funding laws. We apologise to Mr. Ghannouchi."[40]

On 17 May 2013, theBBCpublished an apology on their website for previously publishing inaccurate statements about Ghannouchi six months earlier on 21 November 2012.[41]The article had accused Ghannouchi of threatening to order troops on to the streets if the Ennahdha Party did not get the results he expected in the elections in 2011, and suggested he condoned the violent Salafist attack on the United States embassy and the burning of theAmerican School in Tunisin September 2012.[41]Acknowledging that none of these accusations and suggestions were in fact true, the retraction concluded: "The BBC apologises to Mr Ghannouchi for these mistakes and for the distress they caused him."[41]

Libel case

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In 2020, the UK High Court ruled in favour of Ghannouchi in a libel case against Middle East Online (MEO) and its editor Haitham El Zobaidi. Middle East Online and one of its editors had claimed that Ennahda "supported terrorism", a charge Ghannouchi "vigorously denied". According to Ahmed Yusuf, the article was part of a "a systematic campaign" against Ghannouchi from "media backed bySaudi Arabia,theUnited Arab Emirates(UAE) andEgypt."[42]

Corruption charges

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On 1 February 2024, Rached Ghannouchi was sentenced along with his son-in-law to three years in prison by the Tunis court, for illicit foreign financing, and ordered to pay a fine of $1.17 million on behalf of his party.[43][44]On 19 February, he went on a hunger strike in prison in solidarity with other opposition figures imprisoned by Saied's government.>[45]On July 13, 2024, his sentence to three years in prison was confirmed by the Criminal Chamber of the Judicial and Financial Unit.[46]

Views and background

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Ghannouchi's willingness to compromise with secularists in Tunisia and his country's unique success in maintaining a democratic system following the Arab Spring has been credited by at least one observer (Robert Worth) to his background. Unlike many Islamists, Ghannouchi "lived abroad for decades, reading widely in three languages", including Western thinkersKarl Marx,Sigmund FreudandJean-Paul Sartre.He admired the courage of leftists who protested in the streets against the dictatorship, were arrested and tortured in prison, and became willing to work with them.[13]Watching theinitial victory of the Algerian Islamists—while exiled in London—collapse into the slaughter, mayhem and defeat of thecivil war,left a deep impact.[47]According to Azzam S. Tamimi, he was influenced byMalik Bennabiand his treatise "Islam and Democracy", which laid "the foundations" for Ghannouchi's "masterpiece"Al‐Hurriyat al‐'Ammah(Public Liberties).[16]

In 2002, an unsympathetic Western source (Martin Kramer) described him as differing "from other Islamists" in his insistence "that Islam accepts multi-party democracy."[2]

In 2015, he told French journalist Olivier Ravanello that homosexuality should not be criminalized, though he opposed gay marriage.[48]He has been interviewed byMichael MooreinWhere to Invade Nextand stated that homosexuality is a "private affair."

Personal life

[edit]

On 13 July 2021, the officialTAPnews agency reported that Ghannouchi, already vaccinated, tested positive forCOVID-19.[49]On 1 August, he was discharged a few hours after he was readmitted to a hospital.[50]

Awards

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Chatham House prize in 2012, Ghannushi and Marzouki.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Tamimi, Azzam S. (2001).Rachid Ghannouchi: A Democrat Within Islamism.Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 3.ISBN978-0-19-514000-2.OCLC191942187.In a bunker in a small village close to Hamma in the province of Gabès in southeastern Tunisia, Rachid Ghannouchi was born on 22 June 1941.
  2. ^abKramer, Martin (Fall 2002)."Rachid Ghannouchi: A Democrat within Islamism".Middle East Quarterly.1(4).Retrieved18 October2016.
  3. ^abFeldman, Noah (2011-10-30)."Islamists' Victory in Tunisia a Win for Democracy: Noah Feldman".Bloomberg.Retrieved2011-10-31.
  4. ^Turess Press."إلى الأستاذ راشد الخريجي (حركة النهضة)".Retrieved16 June2013.
  5. ^"TIME 100: The List".Time.18 April 2012. Archived fromthe originalon April 19, 2012.Retrieved14 February2013.
  6. ^Foreign Policy."The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers 2011".Archived fromthe originalon 2012-05-04.Retrieved2017-03-11.{{cite web}}:|last=has generic name (help)
  7. ^Chatham House."Chatham House Prize 2012".
  8. ^Ghannouchi, Rached."Transcript of speech at Chatham House Prize 2012 awards ceremony, 26 November 2012"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 12 October 2017.Retrieved22 January2015.
  9. ^"Jamnalal Bajaj Awards".Jamnalal Bajaj Foundation.Retrieved2017-02-16.
  10. ^"Tunisia parliament elects Ennahdha's Rachid Ghannouchi as speaker".www.aljazeera.com.
  11. ^"Tunisia's parliament speaker narrowly survives confidence vote".www.aljazeera.com.
  12. ^abWorth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. pp. 203–4.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  13. ^abWorth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. pp. 207–8.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  14. ^Kechichian, Joseph A. (September 16, 2011)."A genuine Islamist democrat".Gulf News.Retrieved18 October2016.
  15. ^Linda G. Jones, "Portrait of Rashid Al-Ghannoushi"Middle East Report,No. 153 (July–August 1988).
  16. ^abTamimi, Azzam S. (2001)."Rachid Ghannouchi: A Democrat Within Islamism. The Question of Democracy, Azzam S. Tamimi".Oxford Scholarship Online.doi:10.1093/0195140001.001.0001.ISBN9780195140002.Retrieved18 October2016.
  17. ^"The exile close to winning first Arab Spring election | The Times".The Times.Retrieved2017-03-08.
  18. ^"Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2018-10-24.Retrieved2011-10-26.
  19. ^ab"A U.S. Visa for Rachid Ghannouchi?".October 27, 2010.
  20. ^Merley, Steven (October 13, 2014)."Tunisian Muslim Brotherhood Leader Speaks In Washington; Rachid Ghannouchi Has Long History Of Extremism And Support For Terrorism".Global Muslim Brotherhood Daily Watch.Retrieved18 October2016.
  21. ^"Rachid Ghannouchi".Global Muslim Brotherhood Daily Watch.17 January 2015.Retrieved18 October2016.
  22. ^Tamimi, Azzam S. (2001)."Rachid Ghannouchi: A Democrat Within Islamism. Ghannouchi's Detractors, Azzam S. Tamimi [summary]".Oxford Scholarship Online.doi:10.1093/0195140001.001.0001.ISBN9780195140002.Retrieved18 October2016.
  23. ^Kirkpatrick, David D.; Fahim, Kareem (18 January 2011)."More Officials Quit in Tunisia Amid Protests".The New York Times.Retrieved19 January2020.
  24. ^راشد الغنوشي زعيم حركة النهضة يعود إلى تونس اليوم بعد 20 عاما في المنفى(in Arabic).Asharq Al-Awsat.30 January 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 8 March 2012.Retrieved30 January2011.
  25. ^"Rached Ghannouchi de retour à Tunis après 20 ans d'exil: un accueil exceptionnel".Leaders.30 January 2011.Retrieved30 January2011.
  26. ^Gerges, Fawaz (June 2012)."The Many Voices of Political Islam"(PDF).The Majalla.1573:14–18. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 30 July 2013.Retrieved4 April2013.
  27. ^Mzioudet, Houda (14 December 2011)."Ennahdha's Jebali Appointed as Tunisian Prime Minister".Tunisia Live.Archived fromthe originalon 17 January 2012.Retrieved21 December2011.
  28. ^"Tunisia's constitution will not be based on Sharia: Islamist party".Al Arabiya. 27 March 2012.Retrieved18 February2013.
  29. ^Osman, Tarek (2016).Islamism: What it Means for the Middle East and the World.Yale University Press. p. 85.ISBN9780300197723.Retrieved16 October2016.
  30. ^Worth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. pp. 199–204.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  31. ^Worth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. p. 206.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  32. ^Worth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. pp. 205, 207.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  33. ^abWorth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. p. 218.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  34. ^"Tunisia's main Islamist party to stay out of presidential election".Reuters. 8 September 2014.Retrieved20 September2014.
  35. ^Worth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. p. 219.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  36. ^Worth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. p. 220.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  37. ^"Now is the time".The Economist.Retrieved2018-11-17.
  38. ^"An apology to Rachid Ghannouchi".The Economist.Retrieved2018-11-17.
  39. ^"Apology to Rashid Ghannouchi | Carter-Ruck".www.carter-ruck.com.Retrieved2020-05-24.
  40. ^"Rachid Ghannouchi".The Independent.Retrieved2018-11-17.
  41. ^abc"Apology to Rached Ghannouchi".BBC.co.uk.17 May 2013.Retrieved27 May2013.
  42. ^Tunisia's Rached Ghannouchi wins libel case in UK High Court,29 May 2020,Middle East Eye
  43. ^En Tunisie, Rached Ghannouchi condamné à trois années supplémentaires de prison,1 February 2024,Le Monde
  44. ^Tunisian opposition party leader sentenced to 3 years as crackdown on president’s critics continues,3 February 2024,Associated Press
  45. ^Imprisoned Tunisian opposition leader Rached Ghannouchi initiates hunger strike in protest,19 February 2024,Africanews
  46. ^A9s-%C5%95-three-years-firm,520,139350,3 Affaire du lobbying: Rached Ghannouchi et Rafik Abdessalem condamnés à trois ans ferme,13 July 2024, Business News
  47. ^Worth, Robert F. (2016).A Rage for Order: The Middle East in Turmoil, from Tahrir Square to ISIS.Pan Macmillan. p. 209.ISBN9780374710712.Retrieved31 July2016.
  48. ^Guizani, Emna (April 20, 2015)."News Rached Ghannouchi: Homosexuality Should Not Be Criminalized".tunisia-live.net. Archived fromthe originalon 12 October 2017.Retrieved17 October2016.
  49. ^"Vaccinated, Rached Ghannouchi tested positive for COVID-19 (ARP)".Tunis Afrique Presse. July 13, 2021.RetrievedAugust 2,2021.
  50. ^"Tunisia's powerful parliament speaker Ghannouchi leaves hospital".Tunis Afrique Presse. August 2, 2021.RetrievedAugust 2,2021.
  51. ^"The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers".2011-11-28.Retrieved2017-01-26.
  52. ^"Chatham House Prize 2012 - Rached Ghannouchi and Moncef Marzouki".2015-04-08.Retrieved2017-01-26.
  53. ^"'Rached Ghannouchi lauréat du prix Ibn Rochd de la pensée libre pour l'année 2014'".2015-04-08.Retrieved2017-10-22.
  54. ^"Tunisia's Ghannushi is member of AMU students' union".The Times of India.8 April 2015.Retrieved2016-05-12.
  55. ^"Tunisia proof that democracy can sustain in Arab world".Business Standard India.Press Trust of India. 2015-04-08.Retrieved2017-05-12.
  56. ^"Tunisia deploys army, makes 300 arrests as violent unrest persists".Reuters.2018-01-11.Retrieved2023-05-10.
  57. ^"Rached Gannouchi, prix Gandhi pour la Paix".2015-04-08.Retrieved2017-11-06.
  58. ^"'Rached Ghannouchi sera fait "docteur honoris causa" de l'Université islamique de Malaisie'".2015-04-08.Retrieved2017-07-12.
  59. ^"Toplist Arabic 2018".2018-01-17. Archived fromthe originalon 2020-01-15.Retrieved2018-01-20.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Tamimi, Azzam (2001).Rachid Ghannouchi: a democrat within Islamism.New York: Oxford University Press.ISBN0-19-514000-1.
  • Saeed, Abdullah (1999). "Rethinking citizenship rights of non-Muslims in an Islamic State; Rashid al-Gannushi's contribution to the evolving debate".Islam and Christian Muslim Relations.10(3): 307–323 [p. 311].doi:10.1080/09596419908721189.
  • alhiwar.net 6 May 2007
  • Jones, Linda G. (1988). "Portrait of Rashid al-Ghannoushi".Islam and the State.Middle East Report. Vol. 153. New York: Middle East Research and Information Project. pp. 19–22.
  • al-Ghannoushi, Rashid & Jones, Linda G. (1988). "Deficiencies in the Islamic Movement".Islam and the State.Middle East Report. Vol. 153. New York: Middle East Research and Information Project. pp. 23–24.
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