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Tunisian President Beji Caid Essebsi (R) and Rached Ghannouchi, leader of the Islamist Ennahda movement, gesture during a congress of the Ennahda movement in Tunis,Tunisia May 20, 2016. Zoubeir Souissi Image Credit: REUTERS

Hammamet, Tunisia: The president of Tunisia’s Islamist Al Nahda party was re-elected on Monday, as the group meets for a key congress to discuss separating religious and political activities.

Rached Gannouchi, who won the ballot comfortably with 800 votes, about 570 more votes than the runner-up, said his party is keeping apace with changes in Tunisian society.

Al Nahda is a “Tunisian movement that is evolving with... Tunisia and is part of its evolution”, Gannouchi said, according to local media.

“From today, we are seriously moving towards becoming a national and civil political party with an Islamic core, which operates under the country’s constitution and inspires Muslim and modern values,” he said.

Gannouchi, 74 — an intellectual who once advocated a strict application of Sharia — founded the Islamic Tendency Movement in 1981 along with others inspired by Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood.

The movement became Al Nahda in 1989.

Banned under the dictatorship of strongman Zine Al Abidine Bin Ali, the party was legalised after the 2011 uprising that kicked off the Arab Spring and ousted the veteran leader.

Gannouchi, who lived in exile for 20 years, returned to a triumphal welcome after the uprising and won post-revolution elections in October 2011.

But two years later he had to step aside amid a deep political crisis.

In 2014, the secularist Nidaa Tunis party of President Beji Qaid Al Sebsi won parliamentary elections, beating Al Nahda which came second.

On the eve of the congress, French daily Le Monde published an interview with the party leader in which he said there was no longer any room for “political Islam” in post-Arab Spring Tunisia.

“Tunisia is now a democracy. The 2014 constitution has imposed limits on extreme secularism and extreme religion,” he was quoted as saying.

Around 1,200 Al Nahda delegates are meeting for the three-day meeting that opened on Friday in Hammamet, south of Tunis, to discuss the party’s future and adopt economic, political and social roadmaps.