Career
Public pressure forced him to resign a week after controversially praising French Minister Michèle Alliot-Marie, who openly supported Ben Ali and helped deliver tear gas to police forces. He was only in office for two weeks. His predecessor who was Ben Ali"s foreign minister — Kamel Morjane — had also resigned from his post.
His successor — Mouldi Kefi — was appointed on 21 February 2011.
On January 29, after a week of protests in Egypt he said Tunisia and Egypt are different and both must "chart their own course". He also emphasized that Tunisia in not going to involve itself in Egypt.
Controversy and resignation
In his trip to Paris, he angered many Tunisians by stating he had always dreamed of meeting French Foreign Minister Alliot-Marie. He went on to praise her by stating she was "above all a friend of Tunisia".
In Tunis, about 300 employees of the foreign ministry staged a protest rally outside their workplace to demand that he step down after his comments.
Hundreds more joined the protest. After only two weeks as foreign minister, he resigned on 13 February 2011.