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Thousands attend funeral of Tunisian opposition leader

Supporters of assassinated politician Mohamed Brahmi line streets of Tunis and call for government to be toppled.

Supporters and family members of Mohamed Brahmi attended his funeral on July 27, 2013. (AFP/Getty)

Tens of thousands of Tunisians have turned out for the funeral of assassinated secular politician Mohamed Brahmi, and called for the Islamist-led government to be toppled.

Military helicopters hovered overhead and hundreds of troops and police lined the route of the procession on Saturday.

Wrapped in the red and white Tunisian flag, Brahmi's coffin left his home in the Tunis neighborhood of Ariana en route to El-Jellaz cemetery.

Supporters of Brahmi and members of his family took part in the procession. No representatives of the government led by the Ennahda party attended.

Al Jazeera's Youssef Gaigi, reporting from the capital, Tunis, said people at the funeral were asking "how many people they have to lose before they have democratic state".

"This is the second assassination and the government is under concrete pressure of the opposition," he said.

After the funeral, thousands gathered in the streets and violence broke out in several cities.

A bomb in a police car exploded in Tunis before the funeral but caused no casualties.

Ennahda blamed

Brahmi, 58, was shot dead outside his home on Thursday with the same weapon used to gun down fellow opposition politician Chokri Belaid in February, Interior Minister Lotfi Ben Jeddou said.

He was an MP with the leftist and nationalist Popular Movement he founded but quit the party on July 7 saying it had been infiltrated by Islamists.

Brahmi's widow Mbarka told the AFP news agency that he would be buried next to Belaid, the leftist politician assassinated in February whose funeral was attended by tens of thousands and turned into a protest against Ennahda.

The families of both men have accused Ennahda of being implicated in the deaths, but the authorities said on Friday that the investigation pointed to individuals with links to al-Qaeda.

The Interior Ministry accuses French-born weapons smuggler Boubakr Hakim of being the gunman.

Brahmi's death further deepened divisions between Islamists and their secular opponents that emerged after President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali was toppled in 2011 in the first of the revolutions that also felled leaders in Egypt, Libya and Yemen.

Source: Al Jazeera and news services

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