The speaker of Tunisia's broken up parliament and most despised opponent of President Kais Saied was delivered late Thursday, his legal counselor said, in the wake of being investigated for a case including tax evasion and "prompting to brutality".

Rached Ghannouchi, who likewise heads the Islamist-enlivened Ennahdha party that ruled Tunisian legislative issues for 10 years until Saied organized a power get in mid-2021, was recently addressed working on it in July.


Other Ennahdha individuals are likewise confronting indictment over dubious exchanges including Instalingo, a computerized content creation firm.


The organization has been being scrutinized since last year for purportedly "plotting against state security" and instigating savagery.


Following a 14-hour hearing, the exploring judge delivered Ghannouchi, said his legal counselor Sami Triki, adding that no date for the following hearing has been set at this point.


Prior in the day, the 81-year-old showed up at court in the beach front city of Sousse, where he told columnists the case was an "unfilled document" and an "imagined issue".


"This is exaggerated and pointed toward diverting the Tunisian nation from the genuine issues we're confronting," he said.


Ghannouchi has brutally condemned Saied's July 2021 power snatch, during which the president fired the Ennahdha-upheld government and held onto full leader authority.


Saied likewise broke down the parliament and pushed through a constitution giving his own office practically limitless powers.

Ghannouchi and other Ennahdha authorities are likewise being investigated in a different case, known as the "shipment of jihadists" to struggle zones, which has been at the core of the political discussion for a really long time and has as of late reemerged.


Ennahdha denies every one of the charges against its individuals.


In July, judges froze Ghannouchi's Tunisian ledgers and those of a few family members and individuals from his party.


That came after a court gave a movement boycott against him in May as a component of an enquiry into the 2013 killings of two conspicuous left-wing figures.

Source: France 24