Tunisia's Freed Presidential Candidate Vows to Fight and 'Win'

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Tunisian presidential hopeful Nabil Karoui said Thursday he will "wage battle and win" a weekend runoff against a political newcomer, a day after the business tycoon was released from jail.

"There is a day or two left but we will wage the battle and we will win," he said, a day before campaigning wraps up for Sunday's election.

His wife, Salwa Smaoui, who campaigned on his behalf while he was behind bars, stood besides him outside the headquarters of Karoui's Qalb Tounes party and said: "I am handing over to him (the task of campaigning)."

Karoui had been detained since August over a money laundering probe and tax evasion.

He was released on Wednesday to a hero's welcome from his supporters following a decision by the Court of Cassation.

"Yesterday, the judicial system set me free. The independent judicial system... there was no deal (for my release)," Karoui told reporters and supporters.

The 56-year-old had described his incarceration as a "political" move.

"I had hoped that the elections would be pushed back by a week," he said of Sunday's runoff.

His return to the political arena as a free man comes at a time of uncertainty for the country hailed as the sole democratic success story of the Arab Spring.

Karoui will face conservative law professor Kais Saied in the runoff.

- 'Fair campaigning' -

And with the contenders now free to campaign on a level playing field, the pair -- both political outsiders -- are expected to take part in a one-on-one television debate on Friday night.

Saied last week announced he was quitting the campaign in order to avoid an unfair advantage of Karoui while he lingered in jail.

"Now that this obstacle has been lifted he is ready to resume campaigning," his brother Naoufel Saied told a local television channel.

Saied topped the first round with 18.4 percent of votes, the elections commission ISIE said, while Karoui came in second with 15.6 percent, out of a field of more than 20 candidates, including seasoned politicians.

Karoui is due to give an television interview on Thursday night.

His chances of wooing voters got a boost from parliamentary elections held on Sunday.

Qalb Tounes came in second with 38 seats, behind the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party which won 52 out of 217 seats in the national assembly -- far short of the 109 needed to govern.

"I thank the Tunisian people for the trust they put in me despite the defamation campaign of which I was the victim," Karoui said.

"This trust helped me reach the finals and become the second force in parliament."

Karoui said his party has grown to include half a million members since he was jailed -- up from 1,000 -- and he was happy to be back among his political "family".

"I wish to thank the judges who are honorable people and who set me free despite political pressure... they realized that I had suffered from injustice," he added.

One of his lawyers, Nazih Soui, has said that although Karoui is now "free" he still remains under investigation.

A former executive for Colgate-Palmolive who launched a media agency with his brother in 2002, Karoui presents himself as a candidate for the poor.

He burnished his reputation in recent years with a charity show on a TV channel that he founded, travelling the country to hear grievances and distributing aid to needy families.

On Sunday, seven million Tunisians will return to polling stations for the final round of the vote, the second free presidential election since the 2011 Arab Spring revolt that toppled longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.