Tunisia polling stations open for presidential election

Tunisia on Sunday staged a presidential election, with incumbent Kais Saied expected to secure another five years in office as his main critics are behind bars.

Three years after Saied staged a sweeping power grab, the election is seen as a closing chapter in Tunisia’s experiment with democracy.

The North African country had prided itself for more than a decade for being the birthplace of the Arab Spring uprisings against dictatorship.

The ISIE electoral board said about 9.7 million people were expected to turn out. About 47 percent of them are aged between 36 and 60.

At one polling station in central Tunis, a group of mostly older men were seen lining up to vote.

“I came to support Kais Saied,” 69-year-old Nouri Masmoudi said. “My whole family is going to vote for him.”

Fadhila, 66, said she voted “in response to those who called for a boycott”.

The station had seen “a good influx of voters”, mostly over 40 years of age, its director Noureddine Jouini said, with 200 voters in the first half hour of polling.

An hour into the vote, Farouk Bouasker, head of ISIE, said the board had seen a “considerable attendance” of voters.

In another station in the capital, Hosni Abidi, 40, said he feared electoral fraud.

“I don’t want people to choose for me,” he said. “I want to check the box for my candidate myself.”

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