The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Algerian lawyers take to the streets to back anti-Bouteflika protests

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ALGIERS: Hundreds of lawyers in black robes took to the streets of downtown Algiers yesterday to press President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to step down after 20 years in power, adding momentum to the biggest protests there since the 2011 Arab Spring.

Security forces were deployed to monitor the demonstrat­ion but as with previous protests, they did not intervene.

“The people want to overthrow the regime”, lawyers shouted.

“Republic, not a kingdom,” others chanted.

Tens of thousands of Algerians, tired of the dominance of elderly veterans of the 1954-1962 war of independen­ce against France, have taken to the streets to urge the ailing president not to stand in an election scheduled for April 18. He has submitted his candidacy papers.

The unrest poses the biggest challenge yet to Bouteflika and his inner circle, which includes members of the military, intelligen­ce services and big business figures. He has not spoken in public since suffering a stroke in 2013 and remains in a hospital in Geneva.

The national associatio­n of lawyers has demanded that the authoritie­s postpone the election and set up a transition­al government. An anonymous call for a general strike has gone largely unheeded but the leadership faces another test an online call for a ‘March of 20 Million’ this Friday.

Some officials from Bouteflika’s ruling FLN party have turned up at demonstrat­ions. Several public figures have announced their resignatio­ns in a country where personnel changes normally take place behind closed doors.

Protesters have praised the military, which has stayed in barracks throughout the unrest. But analysts and former officials say the generals are likely to intervene if the protests lead to instabilit­y in one of Africa’s biggest oil producers. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Police attempt to disperse lawyers trying to force their way to the constituti­onal council during a protest to denounce an offer by Bouteflika to run in elections next month but not to serve a full term if re-elected, in Algiers, Algeria. — Reuters photo
Police attempt to disperse lawyers trying to force their way to the constituti­onal council during a protest to denounce an offer by Bouteflika to run in elections next month but not to serve a full term if re-elected, in Algiers, Algeria. — Reuters photo

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