The Borneo Post (Sabah)

183 injured in Algeria protests — State news agency

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ALGIERS: A total of 183 people were injured during protests across Algeria on Friday against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s bid for election to a fifth term, the state news agency APS said on Saturday, citing the health ministry.

One person died of a heart attack, officials said earlier.

Tens of thousands of protesters called on the ailing, 82-year-old Bouteflika to abandon plans to seek re-election in an April presidenti­al vote — Algeria’s biggest anti-government rallies since the Arab Spring eight years ago.

He has not formally confirmed he will stand, although representa­tives have indicated he will do so. APS reported on Saturday that Bouteflika had named Abdelghani Zaalane as his campaign director.

Friday’s protests were mostly peaceful but scuffles between police and protesters broke out in the evening near the presidenti­al place in the capital Algiers. Algiers was quiet on Saturday. Large-scale demonstrat­ions — rarely seen in Algeria with its ubiquitous security services — against Bouteflika’s re-election move began a week ago, but Friday saw the biggest turnout yet.

Bouteflika suffered a stroke in 2013 and has been seen in public only a few times since. His reelection bid stoked resentment among Algerians who believe he is not fit to run the major oil- and gas-producing country.

Bouteflika’s campaign manager had said on Tuesday he would submit his official applicatio­n yesterday, the deadline for candidates. Bouteflika, who turned 82 on Saturday, has not directly addressed the protests.

Authoritie­s said last week he would travel to Geneva for unspecifie­d medical checks. Swiss television said on Friday Bouteflika was at Geneva University Hospital. There was no official confirmati­on that Bouteflika was in the Swiss city. Many Algerians for years avoided politics in public, fearing trouble from the security services or disillusio­ned as the country has been run by the same group of veterans since the 1954-1962 independen­ce war with France. — Reuters

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