Tunisian special forces stand guard in Kasserine, the regional capital
of the western region of Mount Chaambi. (Abederrazek Khlifi, AFP)
Tunis - Tunisia's ruling Islamist party and its opponents have named
Industry Minister Mehdi Jomaa as prime minister in a caretaker
technocrat cabinet to govern until elections next year, three sources
close to negotiations said on Saturday.
The appointment is part
of an agreement that will see moderate Islamist party Ennahda hand over
power in the next few weeks to end a crisis that threatened Tunisia's
transition to democracy after its 2011 uprising.
Three years
after its protests against autocrat Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali inspired
Arab uprisings elsewhere, Tunisia has been struggling with disputes over
the role of Islam in one of the Arab world's most secular countries.
Jomaa,
an aerospace engineer by training, will head the non-partisan cabinet
that will govern until elections likely in early 2014.
Under the
agreement brokered by Tunisia's powerful labour unions, Islamist Ennahda
party, which faced opposition from secular rivals, has agreed to resign
once politicians decide on a caretaker cabinet, complete the country's
new constitution and set a date for elections.
Despite its
crisis, Tunisia has fared better than two North African neighbours that
also toppled their leaders. Egypt's elected Islamist president is in
jail after the military ousted him, and Libya is struggling to control
the militias that fought Muammar Gaddafi.
But Tunisia's crisis
has hurt the economy and prospects of generating prosperity in the
nation where a street vendor set himself on fire nearly three years ago
in a gesture of despair that ignited a flame of revolt across the Arab
world.
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