Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali said he wanted to form a government of technocrats, to ease tensions.
BBC: Tunisia President Marzouki's CPR 'to withdraw ministers'
Mohamed Hamadi lives with his family on a finger of Lebanese soil sandwiched between Syrian territory.
Talks on the creation of a new government in Tunisia have failed, Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali has said .
Ennahda's deputy leader, Hamadi Jebali, then became prime minister of a coalition government that included the CPR and a leftist party, Ettakatol.
Former PM Hamadi Jebali resigned after being unable to form the neutral technocratic administration he believed was necessary after the murder of Mr Belaid.
Former PM Hamadi Jebali resigned after being unable to form the neutral technocratic administration he believed was necessary after the death of Mr Belaid.
To do so, it should accept Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali's proposal to appoint a non-partisan cabinet to enforce neutral rules of political discourse until the next parliamentary election.
Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali's call for a new government of technocrats has already been rejected by his own Ennahda party, which insists on a political government until new elections.
Late Wednesday, Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali, head of the moderate religious party Ennahda, sacked his Cabinet and called for new elections, leaving himself at the head of a caretaker government.
The news comes one day after Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali said he would step down if a caretaker government he is forming fails to win approval from Tunisia's National Constituent Assembly.
CNN: President's party to quit coalition government in Tunisia
Mr Abbou said the CPR was opposed to the formation of a non-partisan government of technocrats, as suggested by Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali last week to end the crisis in Tunisia, AFP news agency reports.
The attacks sent the country's delicate political transition into turmoil, prompting then-Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali to resign in February and raising fears that the Ennahda-led government was failing not only at the economy but security as well.
In Tunisia, the revolution, which since the ouster of Ben Ali had been progressing well, despite opposition from several Islamist groups, suffered significant regression following the brutal and cowardly assassination of Chokri Belaid, a secularist and staunch critic of the ruling Islamist-led government of Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali.
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