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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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November 9, 2018
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Tunisian
Ennahda's 'Secret Apparatus' Draws Comparisons to Brotherhood Origins
by Hany Ghoraba
Special to IPT News
November 9, 2018
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A poster memorializes
slain Ennahda foes Mohamed Brahmi and Chokri Belaid.
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A lawsuit accusing Tunisia's Ennahda Movement of plotting
the assassination of two political opponents poses the most serious
challenge to the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated group since its 1981
inception.
Mohamed
Brahmi and Chokri Belaid were killed in separate 2013 shootings involving the same gun. Both men opposed the Ennahda
Movement, which was in power at the time. Investigators blamed a jihadist
cell and identified a 30-year-old French weapons smuggler as one of the
killers. Subsequent investigations by attorneys for the dead men uncovered
a massive amount of evidence which was presented to the Tunisian
prosecutors. They opened a formal investigation into Ennahda's secret apparatus on
Oct. 10. The attorneys gave the same evidence to a Tunisian military court,
which deals with terrorism and national security.
The lawsuit alleges the murder plots were hatched by Ennahda's secret security apparatus, which the attorneys claim
was created by the Egyptian Brotherhood.
Described as an Arab Spring success, Tunisia has made social and
economic reforms
that collide with Islamist desires represented by the Ennahda Movement. In
September, Tunisia's secular incumbent President Beji Caid Essebsi dissolved an alliance with Ennahda .
The attorneys who brought the suit provided Tunisian authorities with
evidence implicating Ennahda in the assassinations, said attorney Ridha Raddaoui. That includes a document
titled "Motorcycle Fighting skills," which was found in Interior
Ministry archives. It details the training methods for assassinations using
motorcycles, which were used in Brahmi's and Belaid's murders.
The Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood introduced this type of training in the
1940s as part of its own "Secret
Apparatus." According to the Brotherhood literature, it was formed
to execute military operations and train Egyptian citizens militarily to defend
against foreign invasions. However, it wasn't long before it was turned
into a political tool of assassinations and terrorism. The assassinations
targeted high profile Egyptian officials, including Prime Minister Mahmoud Al Noqrashy Pasha in 1948.
Interior Ministry documents show that Ennahda set up a similar apparatus
based on a Muslim Brotherhood proposal, Raddaoui told a press
conference. One document released as part of the lawsuit includes
communication between Mustafa Khadr, chief of Ennahda's secret apparatus, and
the Brotherhood in Egypt. The contents of those conversations have not been
released.
Two unnamed Egyptian MB officials came to Tunisia posing as agricultural
experts to help Ennahda set up the apparatus, Raddaoui said.
He also accused
Khadr of planting two Tunisian spies inside the American embassy in
Tunisia.
Ennahda's spy network allegedly wiretapped civilians, celebrities and
key political and judicial figures, tape recordings released by Tunisian lawyer and radio presenter Dalia
Ben Mbarek indicate. In one tape, Khadr is heard claiming that the head of the
Tunis court is in working to serve the Ennahda apparatus' agenda.
Khadr, the alleged leader of Ennahda's secret apparatus, is a former
Tunisian officer who was dishonorably discharged from the army. He is
serving eight years in prison for hiding evidence and documents related to
the murders of Brahmi and Belaid . The lawsuit alleges that Khadr has
direct ties to Ennahda founder Rachid
Ghannouchi and Nourerddine Bhiri, who was justice minister from
2011-2013.
Tunisian MP Mongi Al Rahoui, who is part of the group that filed
the lawsuit, also accused Khadr of having ties to al-Hakim, the alleged
assassin. Al-Hakim confessed
in a 2016 interview with ISIS's magazine Dabiq
to killing Brahmi. He said he had hoped the killing would "facilitate
the brothers' movements and so that we would be able to bring in weapons
and liberate our brothers from prisons," and had targeted Brahmi
because he worked for the "apostate" government.
Al-Hakim was killed in a November 2016 U.S. airstrike targeting ISIS
in Syria.
"Ennahda has connections to known terrorists including Abu
Ayyad al-Tunsi, Boubaker al-Hakim and Samy al-Awadi," Al Rahoui said.
A separate lawsuit, filed in June, claims that between 2011-14, the Ennahda-dominated
government helped facilitate travel to Syria for jihadists hoping to fight
with ISIS. More than 6,000 ISIS terrorists came from Tunisia, constituting the largest number of
fighters from a single nationality.
"We presented the documents [showing Ennahda's secret apparatus] to
all Tunisian journalists, researchers and even Tunisian Intelligence"
to prove their authenticity, said Salah Al Dawodi, one of the lawyers involved in
the lawsuit. They include archived messages, audio and video recordings and
other intercepted communication involving Ennahda officials. That evidence
has been presented to Tunisian courts, he said.
"The Tunisian Ennahda Movement is a branch of the Muslim
Brotherhood," said Egyptian MP Mohamed Abu
Hamed, "and therefore adopts all the same mechanisms, strategies
and ideologies adopted by the mother group. That including the
establishment of a secret armed apparatus or a military wing."
This was created to hurt Ennahda's foes " through assassinations
and violence," Abu Hamed said.
He fears a sharp escalation in violence if the military court rules
against Ennahda, comparing it to the violent Muslim Brotherhood reaction
after it was forced from power in 2013.
"Al-Ennahda is now cornered and all the political players demand
that it should be prosecuted for its crimes in Tunisia," said Tunisian
Salvation Front leader Monder Guerfach, who is circulating a petition in the
country calling for Ennahda to be banned.
The Ennahda movement's fate is in the hands of Tunisian the military
court.
Hany
Ghoraba is an Egyptian writer, political and counter-terrorism
analyst at Al Ahram Weekly, author of Egypt's
Arab Spring: The Long and Winding Road to Democracy and a
regular contributor to the BBC.
Related Topics: Hany
Ghoraba, Ennahda
movement, secret
apparatus, Muslim
Brotherhood, assassinations,
Mohamed
Brahmi, Chokri
Belaid, Ridha
Raddaoui, Mustafa
Khadr, ISIS,
foreign
fighters, Rachid
Ghannouchi, Noureddine
Bhiri, Mongi
Al Rahoui, Salah
Al Dawodi, Mohamed
Abu Hamed
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