The Standard (St. Catharines)

Algeria’s leader demanding justice over French colonial-era wrongdoing

Massacres in 1945 ‘committed by the colonizer with extreme brutality’

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ALGIERS, ALGERIA While France celebrated the anniversar­y of victory over the Nazis on Wednesday, Algeria commemorat­ed a more sombre anniversar­y: The crackdown by French colonial forces on Algerian independen­ce activists the same day 79 years ago.

Both events took place on May 8, 1945.

In Paris, French President Emmanuel Macron lay a wreath Wednesday at the eternal flame beneath the Napoleon-era Arc de Triomphe, honouring those killed fighting the Nazis and marking the end of the Second World War in Europe.

At the time of the war, Algeria was the crown jewel in France’s colonial empire, and Algerian soldiers were among those sent to fight for France in Europe. The end of the Second World War unleashed independen­ce movements across the former French and British empires.

In Algiers on Wednesday, ceremonies were being held to honour demonstrat­ors who took to the streets in the towns of Guelma, Sétif and Kherrata to call for freedom from French rule.

“On this day we are rememberin­g the massacres of May 8, 1945, committed by the colonizer with extreme brutality and cruelty, to repress a growing national activist movement that had resulted in massive demonstrat­ions expressing the revolt of the Algerian people and its aspiration to freedom and emancipati­on,” Algerian President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune said in a statement.

They were unusually strong remarks from the Algerian leader, and a reminder of the lingering tensions with France more than 60 years after Algeria won its independen­ce in a painful 1954-1962 war.

Algeria and France today have close economic, security and energy ties, but the question of historical justice remains a sore spot.

Tebboune is expected to raise it on a trip to France later this year. The issue of historical memory “will remain at the centre of our concerns until it enjoys an objective treatment that pays justice to historical truth,” Tebboune said in his statement this week.

During a visit to Algeria in 2022, Macron struck a chummy rapport with Tebboune and agreed to create a commission of historians from both countries to make proposals for reconcilia­tion. The commission released proposals this year, including returning documents and artifacts from French archives to Algeria.

Algerian politician­s have also sought financial reparation­s over French nuclear tests in the Sahara — and, most importantl­y, an official apology from France for colonialer­a crimes.

As France’s first leader born after that era, Macron has sought to confront his country’s past wrongdoing while pivoting to a new era of relations. But he has faced criticism at home, amid growing public support for far-right nationalis­ts who champion the grievances of some French descendant­s of colonizers.

 ?? TOUFIK DOUDOU THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The landmark martyrs monument in Algiers, Algeria. The monument was opened in 1982, on the 20th anniversar­y of Algeria’s independen­ce.
TOUFIK DOUDOU THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The landmark martyrs monument in Algiers, Algeria. The monument was opened in 1982, on the 20th anniversar­y of Algeria’s independen­ce.

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