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Factbox-Reactions to Tunisia's democratic crisis

Tunisians gather after president ousts government, in Tunis

TUNIS (Reuters) - Tunisian President Kais Saied on Sunday sacked the prime minister and froze the activities of parliament, leading his opponents to accuse him of a coup.

This is a selection of what significant players in and outside Tunisia, where regional opinion was often split between states that are friendly or hostile to Islamist ideology, had to say.

THE PRESIDENT

Saied said his actions were in line with the constitution, a response to "hypocrisy, treachery and robbery of the rights of the people" by the political class and denied conducting a coup. He warned that violent opposition would be met "with bullets".

PARLIAMENT

Parliament Speaker Rached Ghannouchi, head of the moderate Islamist Ennahda party which is the biggest in parliament, called the move a coup and urged Tunisians to come onto the streets against it. "Kais Saied is dragging the country into catastrophe," he told Turkish television.

The next three largest parties, Heart of Tunisia, Attayar and Karama also rejected the move as a coup.

Chaab, with 15 of the 217 seats, was the largest party to back Saied, saying it had "corrected the revolutionary path".

Abir Moussi's Free Destourian Party, which opposed the 2011 revolution and gained in opinion polls this year, has not commented.

THE OUSTED GOVERNMENT

Neither Prime Ministe Hichem Mechichi nor any of his cabinet have publicly commented Saied's move. He has not been seen in public since the announcement but security sources said he is at home and not under arrest.

Saied has said he will also replace the justice and defence ministers. He has not said whether the other cabinet members will remain.

THE POWERFUL UNION

The UGTT labour union, with a million members and a previous role in helping defuse moments of political crisis, avoided directly criticising Saied after its leader met him on Monday.

It said Saied must move on from the extraordinary measures named in the constitution quickly and put in place a clear road map to ally fears of an assault on democracy.

OTHER TUNISIAN FIGURES

Former president Moncef Marzouki, who helped oversee the transition to democracy, said Saied's move was a coup. He said Tunisians might hope it was the way out of a political crisis but he feared it was the start of a slope "into an even worse situation".

NORTH AFRICA

Saied spoke by phone to Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune but there was no word about their discussion.

In Egypt, where the government has suppressed the Muslim Brotherhood, a movement long seen as backing Ennahda, there was no official reaction but state media presented Saied's move as part of a battle against the "terrorist Brotherhood organisation".

Neighbouring Libya is itself torn between rival factions. Commander Khalifa Haftar in eastern Libya, who presents himself as a scourge of Islamists, welcomed Saied's move. A member of the Tripoli-based government, which includes some Islamists, voiced concern.

MIDDLE EAST

Ennahda has seen Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan as an ally for decades. The ruling AK party's spokesman Omer Celik said on Twitter Saied's moves amounted to a coup.

Official Gulf reaction was largely muted, though Bahrain, which often moves in political lockstep with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, both sworn enemies of the Muslim Brotherhood, voiced "hope for brotherly Tunisia to achieve good and development for greater stability and prosperity".

WESTERN DEMOCRACIES

The United States and Western European countries have lavished praise on Tunisia for years for adopting democracy. They were largely slow to respond on Monday to Saied's moves and appeared unsure whether to condemn or endorse them.

The European Union urged all political actors in Tunisia to respect the country's constitution and avoid violence.

A spokesperson for the German Foreign Office said the suspension of parliament was was based on a "a rather broad interpretation of the constitution". Expressing concern about developments, the spokesperson noted Tunisia's "good, impressive progress" showing that democracy had taken root since 2011.

"We do not want to call it a coup," the spokesperson said in response to a journalist's question. "We will certainly seek talks with the Tunisian ambassador in Berlin."

There had been no formal U.S. or French response by mid afternoon in Tunisia, nearly 20 hours after Saied's statement.

(Reporting by Tarek Amara and Angus McDowall in Tunis, Hamid Ould Ahmed in Algiers, Ahmed Elumami in Tripoli, Ayman al-Warfali in Benghazi, Ezgi Erkoyun in Ankara, Ghaida Ghantous in Dubai, Holger Hansen in Berlin and Robin Emmott in Brussells; Editing by Giles Elgood)