Gulf News

Algeria seems at crossroads as political transition looms

WHILE MANY ALGERIANS WANT CHANGE, POWERFUL ELITE BACKS BOUTEFLIKA FOR FIFTH TERM

- BY OMAR SHARIFF Deputy GCC/Middle East Editor

Come April 2019, Algerians will head to the polls to elect a new president. However, a year before the election, a political impasse has been created in the country. There has been mounting speculatio­n that President Abdul Aziz Bouteflika, who first came to power in 1999, will seek a fifth term. But the 81-year-old, whose public appearance­s have been rare since he was partially paralysed by a stroke five years ago, has not said if he plans to run. Nor has he designated a successor.

For many Algerians, Bouteflika is a national hero. He is credited with ending the brutal civil war of the 1990s, sparked when the army in 1992 cancelled elections that the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) was poised to win. In his two decades in power, the president has used proceeds from Algeria’s immense oil and gas resources to fund a social safety net. Parliament is dominated by the president’s National Liberation Front (FLN). The secretary general of the FLN and Prime Minister Ahmad Ouyahia have announced their endorsemen­t of Bouteflika to remain in office for a fifth term. Which begs the question: Why is it so difficult for the ruling elite to come up with a feasible transition plan?

Who’s in control?

Analysts point to the fact that in Algeria, there are several elites, and they are involved in the process of determinin­g who will be president. These include the political elite, the economic elite and, above all, senior members of the People’s National Army (PNA).

However, since he was elected in 1999, Bouteflika has managed to restructur­e political power around the office of the presidency and reshaped the military-civilian relationsh­ip in his favour.

Speaking to Gulf News, Walid Namane, an analyst at Control Risks in Dubai, said: “Bouteflika’s supporters control the executive, legislatur­e and judiciary. Should the president run for another term in 2019, political, military and business elites are likely to rally around his candidacy. Meanwhile, the country’s main opposition forces, divided and discredite­d, have been unable to rally around a coherent vision for a political transition. These factors have made it difficult to see the emergence of a feasible transition plan. For the time being, no credible opponent to Bouteflika has emerged with less than a year to go ahead of the election.”

Dr Dalia Ghanem Yazbeck, Resident Scholar at Carnegie Middle East Centre in Beirut, also believes the Algerian elite has to find one consensual figure to present to Algerians. “However, it is beyond argument that no Algerian presidenti­al candidate can even run without the military’s approval, or to be more precise, without at least the approval of key military leaders.

“Algerians refer to that process with the expression ‘djabouhoum’, meaning ‘they were brought to’. In a nutshell, presidents

Bouteflika’s supporters control the executive, legislatur­e and judiciary. Should the president run for another term in 2019, political, military and business elites are likely to rally around his candidacy.” Walid Namane | Analyst at Control Risks in Dubai

must have the support and approval of certain leaders and representa­tives of the PNA,” she said in an interview with Gulf News.

Dalia noted the military in Algeria is “ruling but not governing. It does so from atop a pyramid of power in which the interests of the military, the FLN leadership, and members of the political and economic elite are intertwine­d”.

Revolution­ary past

Decision-making in Algeria remains opaque, and it is unclear which specific individual­s or institutio­ns wield the most power. But analysts like Namane say political developmen­ts between 2010 and 2018 — particular­ly the dismantlin­g of the powerful Department of Intelligen­ce and Security (DRS) in 2016 — led to “a redistribu­tion of power in favour of a coalition between the presidency and its loyal military leadership”.

Bouteflika’s revolution­ary past and diplomatic achievemen­ts in the 1970s under the presidency of Houari Boumediene still garner him support among older Algerians. Namane noted: “In addition, a considerab­le segment of society believes Bouteflika brought peace and stability to the country through the reconcilia­tion process with Islamist armed groups in the early 2000s. Meanwhile, the opposition remains weak and divided. Its leaders lack the resources and charisma to be able to mobilise Algerians around an alternativ­e to the current government. Should the president run for another term in 2019, political, military and business elites are likely to rally around his candidacy.”

Economic reforms

Algeria is a country rich in human and hydrocarbo­n resources. However, despite attempts at privatisat­ion and increasing foreign investment, it remains a closed economy. And Bouteflika has had a lot to do with this, given his social support programme. The implicatio­n is the people who want Bouteflika to stay for a fifth term also want Algeria to remain a closed economy. The public sector continues to be the primary employer for thousands of young Algerians who graduate every year. The country’s efforts to reduce its reliance on hydrocarbo­n revenues has had limited success.

Just last month, Algeria said it planned huge hikes in the fees for identity papers, passports and driving licences, as the government tries to ease pressure on state finances and secure new revenue sources.

The country has been facing financial pressure since crude oil prices started falling in mid2014, halving its oil and gas revenue, which accounts for 60 per cent of state budget.

“The long socialist and protection­ist tradition prevented the emergence of a dynamic private sector that could play a central role in reshaping the socioecono­mic growth model,” Namane said.

“Moreover, the government’s recent measures to restrict imports and the outflow of foreign currency have made it increasing­ly difficult for foreign companies to operate successful­ly in the country.”

 ?? Reuters ?? ■ Bouteflika after casting his ballot during the election last year. The wheelchair-bound president has not said if he plans to run again.
Reuters ■ Bouteflika after casting his ballot during the election last year. The wheelchair-bound president has not said if he plans to run again.
 ?? AP ?? Affairs Minister, with Bouteflika, then Algerian Foreign
Boualem Moussaoui Algerian ambassador to France at Orly airport on gives an interview upon his arrival
February 21, 1964.
AP Affairs Minister, with Bouteflika, then Algerian Foreign Boualem Moussaoui Algerian ambassador to France at Orly airport on gives an interview upon his arrival February 21, 1964.

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