Tunisia completed the presidential elections by holding the second and decisive round to choose a president from among two candidates, Kais Said and Nabil Karoui.
Tunisians did not miss the opportunity to choose their new president for the next five years in a free, direct and secret ballot.
Presidential elections were held in normal conditions, although observers recorded violations at a number of polling stations.
Noureddine Al-Waseef, a spokesman for the Observatory for Observing Election observation confirms the crackdown on civil society activists and reveals the return of corrupt money.
The Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) appreciated the influx of voters at the polling stations, attributing this to the fact that the selection process has become easier for the voter to be confined between only two candidates.
For his part, Farouk Bouaskar, a member of the Independent High Commission, said: “The Tunisian citizen felt the importance of these elections in the second round and there is a respectable direction for the ballot boxes.”
With the closure of the ballot boxes, counting and manual counting began to pave the way for the compilation of results at the electoral commission in order to speed up the process of announcing the winner of the post of President of the Republic.
Nizar Mokni, a journalist and analyst: The public opinion was a protector and there were heated discussions about the programs of candidates.
A secure electoral process and monitoring pending official disclosure.