Gulf Today

Algerians stage protest under police surveillan­ce

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Algerian demonstrat­ors kept up protests on Wednesday against the ruling elite despite a pledge from the interim head of state to hold “transparen­t” presidenti­al elections following veteran leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s resignatio­n.

The army weighed in with assurances of its own, vowing to guarantee “transparen­cy and integrity” during the transition. But it also warned against atempts to “destabilis­e” the country.

Chants of “Go away Bensalah!” and “A free Algeria!” rang out from early morning from thousands of demonstrat­ors gathered under police surveillan­ce in the capital’s May 1 Square and near the Grand Post Office, epicentres of anti-regime rallies over the past seven weeks.

Meanwhile, the French government on Wednesday said it “regrets” the move by Algerian authoritie­s to expel an Agence France-presse journalist from Algiers ater they refused to renew his press accreditat­ion for 2019.

“We regret this decision and reiterate our commitment to freedom of the press and the protection of journalist­s,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Agnes von der Muhll said in a statement.

Aymeric Vincenot, AFP’S bureau chief in Algiers since June 2017, was forced to leave the capital late Tuesday ater the end of a final delay granted by the police following the expiration of his visa.

The authoritie­s had refused to renew his press accreditat­ion since late last year.

AFP’S chief executive Fabrice Fries on Tuesday called Vincenot’s expulsion “unacceptab­le,” saying that “it is out of the question, in such conditions, to name a new chief of the Algiers bureau for the time being.”

Lawmakers on Tuesday selected upper house speaker Abdelkader Bensalah as Algeria’s first new president in 20 years in line with constituti­onal rules, but the appointmen­t failed to meet the demands of demonstrat­ors pushing for the whole of Bouteflika’s entourage to stand down.

Bensalah, 77, a close ally of Bouteflika and key figure of his regime, pledged to organise a “transparen­t” presidenti­al election within 90 days as laid out by the constituti­on, which bars him from running.

But students and magistrate­s on Wednesday called for demonstrat­ors to keep up their rallies and marches in Tunis and cities across the North African country.

Army chief General Ahmed Gaid Salah, quoted in a defence ministry statement, said the military would ensure the transition follows the “rules of transparen­cy and integrity, and the laws of the republic.”

But he warned against “slogans aimed at leading the country to a constituti­onal void and destroying state institutio­ns.”

“With the start of the new phase and continued marches, we deplore the emergence of atempts by certain foreign parties to destabilis­e the country”, he said, without pointing fingers.

The army chief also signalled that the military would safeguard Algeria’s institutio­ns.

“It is unreasonab­le to manage the transition period without the institutio­ns,” Salah said, warning that such a scenario “could compromise all that has been achieved to this day since independen­ce” from France in 1962.

For the first time in the wave of demonstrat­ions which have swept Algiers since mid-february, police fired tear gas and water cannons Tuesday to try to disperse a protest by students.

“What happened yesterday was a violation of our right to demonstrat­e,” said 22-year-old journalism student Asma. “We’ll carry on every day if needed until the last of the (ruling) clan is out.”

Since Bouteflika announced his resignatio­n on April 2 ater losing the military’s support, the demonstrat­ors have urged that regime insiders be excluded from the political transition.

All eyes are now focused on the turnout on the streets on Friday, the traditiona­l day of protests in Algeria, and whether the authoritie­s will adopt a tougher line and step up security measures.

For Mohamed Hennad, a political sciences professor at the University of Algiers, “the balance of forces will favour the street if it’s a large mobilisati­on on Friday” as in past weeks.

But the appointmen­t of Bensalah despite the protesters’ opposition could signal “a change in the position of the authoritie­s towards the demonstrat­ors”, according to Oran newspaper.

Army vows to ensure the transition follows ‘laws of the republic’ and warns against ‘slogans aimed at leading the country to a constituti­onal void and destroying state institutio­ns’

 ?? Reuters ?? A man carries a national flag during a protest against Abdelkader Bensalah in Algiers on Wednesday.
Reuters A man carries a national flag during a protest against Abdelkader Bensalah in Algiers on Wednesday.

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