The Borneo Post

Algerians set for new protests after Bouteflika quit

-

ALGIERS: Algerians were preparing Friday for the first mass protests since the resignatio­n of ailing president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in a key test of whether the momentum for reform can be maintained.

Activists took to social media calling for ‘joyful demonstrat­ions’ to “peacefully bring down a dictatoria­l regime.

Opponents of the old regime have called for a massive turnout, targeting a triumvirat­e they dub the ‘3B’ — Abdelakder Bensalah, Tayeb Belaiz and Prime Minister Noureddine Bedoui.

The veteran Bouteflika loyalists have been entrusted with overseeing the political transition after the veteran leader finally stepped down at the age of 82.

Boutef lika resigned late on Tuesday after weeks of demonstrat­ions triggered by his bid for a fifth term in office.

He had lost the backing of key supporters including armed forces chief Ahmed Gaid Salah.

Bensalah, speaker of the upper house of parliament for 16 years, is to take the reins as interim president for three months until elections are organised.

Belaiz, a minister for 16 years, was named by Bouteflika as head of the Constituti­onal Council which will regulate the elections.

Before his appointmen­t as prime minister, Bedoui had served as interior minister — or, as the French-language El Watan newspaper put it on Thursday, “chief engineer of electoral fraud”.

Opponents say all three are tarnished by their long years of service under Boutef lika and should follow his lead and resign.

One of the leading voices of the protest movement, lawyer Mustapha Bouchachi, called for the demonstrat­ions to continue “until they have all gone”.

“Our victory is partial,” he said in a video posted online.

“Algerians will not accept that symbols of the regime... lead the interim period and organise the next elections.

“These symbols of the regime cannot be part of the solution and we have been demanding since Feb 22 that the whole system, its symbols and its clients, leave,” he added.

“The president’s resignatio­n does not mean that we have actually won.”

Protesters are calling for new transition­al institutio­ns to be set up to implement reforms and organise free elections.

“Sticking with the constituti­on would probably be met with quite a bit of protest, as protesters may be wary of elections not being fair, competitiv­e and free,” said Isabelle Werenfels of the German Institute for Internatio­nal and Security Affairs.

“One option would be to name an independen­t and broadly accepted head for a transition­al body,” she said.

Hamza Meddeb, an independen­t analyst in Tunisia, said Algeria was entering “a very delicate phase, because the street and the institutio­ns are at risk of diverging”. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows police using water cannons to disperse people protesting to demand the resignatio­n of Bouteflika, in Algiers, Algeria. — Reuters photo
File photo shows police using water cannons to disperse people protesting to demand the resignatio­n of Bouteflika, in Algiers, Algeria. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia