Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Wed 05/01/2024 View Tue 04/30/2024 View Mon 04/29/2024 View Sun 04/28/2024 View Sat 04/27/2024 View Fri 04/26/2024 View Thu 04/25/2024
2019-09-07 Africa North
Algerians protest over plan for swift elections
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Tens of thousands of protesters piled once again onto the streets of the Algerian capital and other cities Friday with many rejecting the army chief’s call for presidential elections before the end of the year.

This week’s pro-democracy protest, the 29th in a row, is seen as a test of the continued strength of the movement and a way to gauge the temperature of Gen. Ahmed Gaid Salah’s call this week to set a date by September 15 for presidential elections. That would mean voting would be held by law 90 days later - in mid-December.

Algeria has been without an elected president since protesters, helped by the army chief, forced Abdelaziz Bouteflika
...10th president-for-life of Algeria. He was elected in 1999 and served on his third or four terms. When he announced for the fifth, or maybe it was the sixth, visibly doddering, a grateful nation rose up in its wrath and threw him out...
to resign in early April.

Nationwide demonstrations started on February 22 to protest plans by Bouteflika, who was rarely seen in public since a 2013 stroke, to seek a fifth mandate. His administration was mired in corruption and top figures have since been imprisoned, along with leading industrialists.

Protesters now seek a democratic government and want a say in how to achieve that goal. Many opposition politicians are withholding judgment on Gaid Salah’s call for quick elections while others fear that he is seeking a return of a system they reject.

In the absence of an elected president, Gaid Salah has positioned himself as the country’s main authority figure, and sends out messages to Algerians via his numerous speeches to soldiers during visits to barracks.

Many Algerians want a transition period to work out how to proceed, while others want elections but with conditions.

Hundreds of police were posted, like each week, around downtown Algiers on Friday.

Chants included "We refuse to be led by Gaid Salah" and "We’re sick of generals."

Demonstrations were also held in a number of other cities, including the Kabyle capital of blood-soaked Tizi Ouzou, east of Algiers. And demonstrators demanded "a civilian and democratic nation" in the port city of Oran.

In Algiers, some carried signs bearing the portraits of people imprisoned for "political opinions," including Lakhdar Bouregaa, 86, a veteran of Algeria’s independence war against La Belle France, who had joined protesters.

"Today, the crowd is bigger than recent Fridays ... It’s a response to the discourse of Gaid Salah," Zine Cherfaoui, a commentator with the daily El Watan, said in an interview.

Posted by Fred 2019-09-07 00:00|| || Front Page|| [16 views ]  Top
 File under: Arab Spring 

#1 Consider it a blessing unlike America where we endure nearly two years of the electioneering to include an extra day of it in the actual election year.
Posted by Procopius2k 2019-09-07 07:36||   2019-09-07 07:36|| Front Page Top

17:24 Rex Mundi
16:44 irish rage boy
16:08 Sloluth Sheling6069
15:52 Super Hose
15:46 Uleremp and Company7042
15:46 Gloluth Theling6069
15:46 Super Hose
15:41 Skidmark
15:40 alanc
15:33 swksvolFF
15:32 Nero
15:29 Cured Romantic
15:19 Skidmark
15:12 Skidmark
15:09 Skidmark
14:59 ed in texas
14:55 Besoeker
14:54 ed in texas
14:51 Besoeker
14:48 Besoeker
14:07 Whiskey Mike
13:34 Cleared Cookies Lost Nic
13:30 Frank G
13:30 Frank G









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com