New Era

Algeria expects France to apologise for colonial past

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PARIS - Algeria is waiting for an apology for France’s colonial occupation of the North African country, the president said, expressing hope that Emmanuel Macron would build on recent conciliato­ry overtures.

A global re-examinatio­n of the legacy of colonialis­m has been unleashed by the May killing of unarmed African American George Floyd by a white police officer, which sparked mass protests around the world.

“We have already had half-apologies. The next step is needed... we await it,” President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune said Saturday in an interview with news channel France 24.

“I believe that with President Macron, we can go further in the appeasemen­t process... he is a very honest man, who wants to improve the situation.”

France’s 132 years of colonial rule in Algeria, and the brutal eightyear war that ended it, have left a legacy of often prickly relations between the two countries. In what has been seen as a thaw in ties, Algeria on Friday received the skulls of 24 resistance fighters decapitate­d during the colonial period.

The skulls were laid to rest in the martyrs’ section of the capital’s El Alia cemetery yesterday - the 58th anniversar­y of Algeria’s independen­ce - according to media reports.

Tebboune said an apology from France would “make it possible to cool tensions and create a calmer atmosphere for economic and cultural relations”, especially for the more than six million Algerians who live in France.

In December 2019, Macron said that “colonialis­m was a grave mistake” and called for turning the page on the past.

During his presidenti­al election campaign, he had created a storm by calling France’s colonisati­on of Algeria a “crime against humanity”.

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet has urged countries to make amends for “centuries of violence and discrimina­tion”.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Painful past… National flag-draped coffins containing the remains of 24 Algerian resistance fighters presented at the capital’s Palais De La Culture Moufdi Zakaria.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Painful past… National flag-draped coffins containing the remains of 24 Algerian resistance fighters presented at the capital’s Palais De La Culture Moufdi Zakaria.

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