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Rashid Gannouchi, leader and founder of Al Nahda party (right), with party secretary-general Hammadi Jebali in Tunis on Thursday. Image Credit: AP

Tunis: The leader of the Islamist party which won Tunisia's first free election appealed for calm in the town where the "Arab Spring" began, accusing forces linked to the ousted president of fanning violence there.

Party officials said coalition talks were already under way and they expected to form a new government within ten days. Troops fired in the air on Friday to disperse a crowd attacking government offices in Sidi Bouzid, where ten months ago, vegetable seller Mohamed Bu Azizi set fire to himself in a protest that ignited revolts around the Arab world.

The Al Nahda party, which was banned for decades and its leaders forced to flee abroad, will lead Tunisia's new government after an election victory likely to set a template for other Middle Eastern states rocked by uprisings this year.

Al Nahda has tried to reassure secularists by stressing it will not impose a Muslim moral code.

It will not impose the wearing of the hijab, on women because all attempts to do that in other Arab states have failed, the party's leader said yesterday. Rashid Gannouchi said women would have jobs in the new government "whether they wear a veil or don't wear a veil".

Al Nahda would honour an undertaking to finish writing a new constitution within one year, he said at his first news conference since the election. It would respect all Tunisia's international treaties when it forms a new government.He blamed the Sidi Bouzid clashes on forces connected with ousted president Zine Al Abidine Bin Ali.

The unrest was not linked to the Al Nahda win, but to the fact that a party headed by a businessman popular in the town had been eliminated from the ballot over allegations of campaign finance violations.

Two witnesses in Sidi Bouzid said a large crowd had tried to attack the local government headquarters.

"The military are trying to disperse the people with shots in the air and tear gas," one of the witnesses, Attiyah Athmouni, said by telephone.