Tuesday, March 12, 2019


Tens of thousands of Algerians from a cross-section of society have taken to the streets to protest President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s bid to seek a fifth term in the April 18 elections, posing the most serious threat yet to his 20-year reign.

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Bouteflika, first elected in 1999, has made only rare public appearances in a wheelchair since suffering a stroke in 2013. His last public address was made in 2014.

But his announcement in mid-February that he would seek a fifth term despite his fragile health angered many across Algerian society. A third round of weekend protests and a general strike greeted his return from a medical visit to Switzerland on Sunday, with shops in the capital Algiers remaining closed while public transport was suspended.

“Today we came to fight for our rights," one demonstrator told FRANCE 24. "Our right to education, our right to a better future. We don’t want to be left behind.”
The Algerian diaspora have also been rallying in France and other European cities to demand that Bouteflika stand down.

The anger is hardly surprising, especially in light of the crippling economic hardship facing the country. The unemployment rate is approximately 12%, and more than a quarter of Algerians under the age of 30 are jobless.

Sharp rises in the price of basic items such as sugar, oil and flour have also hit Algerian's hard, with increases of between 20 and 30 percent seen in the first few months of 2019 alone.

Many of the protests are aimed at Algeria’s stagnant political system, which has long been dominated by veterans of Algeria’s war of independence against France (1954-1962). Bouteflika introduced largescale infrastructure programmes during the rise in oil prices between 2004 and 2014, however, the oil-dependent economy took a hit from the subsequent decline in crude prices. This further fuelled fury with how the country was being run.

Bouteflika’s ruling National Liberation Front (FLN) party has urged all sides to unite to end the unrest, Ennahar state TV reported.

Algeria's Bouteflika: A 'phantom head of state'

Is the army changing sides?

Amplifying the pressure on Bouteflika was an apparent about-face on Sunday by a member of Bouteflika’s inner circle, Army Chief of Staff Gaid Salah. Speaking to a group of Algerian military schools, Salah did not mention the unrest specifically but said the army shares “the same values and principles” as the Algerian people and are "partners in one destiny".

Salah had previously expressed disdain for the protests, dismissing them as “dubious” calls “allegedly for democracy” but aimed at "pushing Algerians towards the unknown".

His reversal could be a significant sign that Bouteflika may not survive today’s protests the way he has weathered those in the past.

Francis Ghilès, an associate senior researcher at the Barcelona Centre for International Affairs and an expert on North Africa, noted that the demonstrations now rocking Algeria are the biggest since those proclaiming Algeria’s independence in July 1962, calling them an “earthquake”.

Asked whether Bouteflika’s government is now “panicking”, Ghilès told FRANCE 24: “I think they are panicking … when you look at who is demonstrating, when you see the former veterans’ association leaving Bouteflika, you really get the impression of rats leaving the ship.”

Ghilès noted that, so far, the protests have been mostly peaceful and have avoided undue “provocations” – and the police have been measured in their response. Whether that is because officers have received orders to this effect or because they themselves are also fed up remains to be seen, he said.

Ghilès said there is likely to be burgeoning unrest within the ranks of the army itself.

The army chief of staff, General Salah, and many others at the highest ranks are “immensely corrupt”, he said. But the Algerian military is a professional army with thousands of educated officers who are “professional, solid, honest”, he said.

This dichotomy must be causing “many tensions” within the military sector.

“The people around Bouteflika... it’s a Mafia," said Ghilès. "That’s the only word one can use.”

“They will try to protect their ill-begotten gains.”

But even some members of the president’s FLN party have joined the protests calling for him to step down.Ghilès noted that the Algerian unrest may have already passed the point of no return.
“When you get crowds of this size in the street, I’m not sure you can actually turn the page back. I don’t think you can go back to the statu quo ante,” he said.

“We are certainly at an extraordinarily important moment.”

>> Video: Algeria braced for nationwide strikes, interview with Francis Ghilès
No clear successor

Bouteflika earned widespread respect from many Algerians for his role in ending the country’s decade-long civil war, which erupted in 1992 when a host of Islamist rebel groups took up arms against the government.

The conflict, which killed an estimated 150,000-200,000 people, still weighs on the Algerian mindset, with many prioritising political stability over civil rights concerns.

Rights groups have long accused Bouteflika of being authoritarian in his efforts to undermine workers’ ability to form unions, crackdowns on peaceful protests, and measures in the penal code that restrict free expression, including prison terms for disseminating information that might harm the “national interest” or that is deemed insulting to the president, army or other state institutions.

And yet he remained in power even as the 2011 “Arab Spring” unseated longtime leaders across the region.

With any possible successor likely needing the support of the military as well as Algeria’s elites, no one has thus far emerged who seems poised to take the reins after Bouteflika’s nearly two decades in power.

The president’s 61-year-old brother Said is the man who now stands closest to the presidency and who reportedly controls access to the ailing Bouteflika. General Salah is another possible contender.

A third name that has surfaced is that of veteran Algerian diplomat Lakhdar Brahimi, a former foreign affairs minister who was the UN and Arab League special envoy to Syria until May 2014. Brahimi became well known on the international stage when he was the UN special representative to Afghanistan both during and after Taliban rule. He also served as the UN special envoy to Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

Another former minister of foreign affairs, Ramtane Lamamra, has also been touted as a possible future leader. A career diplomat, Lamamra has acted as a mediator for several conflicts in Africa and has served as Algeria’s ambassador to Djibouti, Ethiopia and the United States.

Profile: Algeria's Abdelaziz Bouteflika