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Supporters of the Nidaa Tounes (Call for Tunisia) secular party movement wave flags and shout slogans in Tunis December 21, 2014. Image Credit: REUTERS

Tunis: Anti-Islamist candidate Beji Qaid Al Sebsi has claimed victory in Tunisia’s first free presidential election but bitter rival and incumbent Munsif Al Marzouqi dismissed the declaration as unfounded and refused to concede defeat.

Tunisians took to the polls on Sunday for the leadership runoff vote, with many calling the ballot a landmark for democracy in the country where the Arab Spring was born.

Although official results were not due until Monday evening, Al Sebsi’s campaign manager Mohsen Marzouq said shortly after polls closed that early indicators signalled a victory for the leader of the Nida Tunis party.

Al Sebsi, 88, appeared before 2,000 supporters who gathered outside his campaign headquarters shouting “Long live Tunisia!” and thanked the voters.

“Tunisia needs all its children. We must work hand in hand,” he said as supporters cheered.

Al Marzouqi’s campaign chief Adnene Mancer said the result was too close to call, and accused the Al Sebsi camp of election “violations”.

It is the first time Tunisians have freely elected their president since independence from France in 1956.

Authorities had urged a big turnout to consolidate democracy following a chaotic four-year transition. Election organisers said turnout was at 59.04 per cent.

Just hours before polling began at 0700 GMT, troops guarding ballot papers in the central region of Qairouan came under attack and shot dead one assailant and captured three, the defence ministry said.

Prime Minister Mahdi Juma condemned what he called a “desperate attempt” to disrupt the election, and later said that what had happened was of no “impact”, adding that the security situation was under control.

The authorities had deployed tens of thousands of soldiers and police to provide security for polling day.

Ahead of the vote, which sets Tunisia apart from the turmoil of other Arab Spring countries, Islamist militants issued a videotaped threat against the North African state’s political establishment.

But voters seemed unfazed.

“This is a big day. I am proud to take part in this historic moment,” said Bashir Ghiloufi, a 54-year-old bank director in Tunis. “It is important to progress towards democracy.”

Raja Gafsi, a 58-year-old worker, said: “It is time to move on and set up long-lasting institutions.”

Like most voters, he was anxious to see a return to political and economic stability and security.

A first round on November 23 saw Al Sebsi win 39 per cent of the vote, six percentage points ahead of Al Marzouqi, a 69-year-old former rights activist installed by parliament two months after December 2011 polls.

Nida Tunis won parliamentary polls in October, making Al Sebsi favourite to be the next president, but with powers curbed under constitutional amendments to guard against a return to dictatorship.

The campaign was marked by mudslinging, with Al Sebsi refusing to take part in a debate with Al Marzouqi, claiming his opponent was “extremist”.

Al Sebsi insists that Al Marzouqi represents the Islamists, charging that they had “ruined” the country since the 2011 revolution, which toppled veteran ruler Zain Al Abidine Bin Ali and sparked the Arab Spring.

Al Marzouqi in turn accused Al Sebsi, who served as a senior official in previous Tunisian regimes, of wanting to restore the old guard deposed in the revolution.

After polling closed, Al Sebsi said in an indirect message to his rival: “The future obliges us to work together for Tunisia.”

Earlier Al Marzouqi had said: “The rules of the democratic game require that each of us accepts the outcome of the vote in a sporting spirit.”

Voters said they regretted the lack of restraint shown by candidates during campaigning, but said they believed Tunisia was on the path to democracy.

“Our candidates and their policies perhaps aren’t the best but we’re moving forward - the dictatorship is over,” said shopkeeper Mohammad Tayeb.

In an internet video posted on Wednesday, militants claimed responsibility for the 2013 murder of two secular politicians that plunged Tunisia into crisis, and warned of more killings of politicians and security forces.

The murders had threatened to derail Tunisia’s post-Arab Spring transition until a compromise government was formed in January this year.

Defence ministry spokesperson Belhassan Oueslati said he did not believe Islamist militants were behind Sunday’s pre-dawn attack.

“The vigilance of the soldiers and the swiftness of their response thwarted this operation and led to the death of a man armed with a hunting rifle and the arrest of three suspects,” Oueslati said.

“Generally, the terrorists don’t use hunting rifles.”

Tunisia also faces major economic challenges.

Its economy is struggling to recover from the upheaval of the revolution, and there are fears of widespread joblessness causing social unrest.