“I was talking and he was silent and listening, then he surprised me.
He switched the coffee cups round. He gave me the coffee that he had,
and took the coffee that I had, saying: ‘Did you have some doubt about
the coffee?’ But this never crossed my mind! So I switched the coffees
back again and took the one I was originally given.”
Odd indeed.
It must have been the first time in history that a dictator thought his
guest feared being poisoned. And at this very moment in our
conversation, a lady entered Mr Ghannouchi’s office with cups of coffee.
Don’t switch the cups, I warned him. The point was not lost. But Mr
Ghannouchi is not a naturally humorous man and he spends a lot of his
time these days trying to persuade his antagonists that – as founder and
leader of the country’s largest party, Ennahda – his doesn’t want an
Islamist state in Tunisia.
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