The National - News

Is Algeria facing a year of upheaval and unrest?

- ABDELKADER CHEREF Dr Abdelkader Cheref is an independen­t scholar based in the United States

Algeria has recently been shaken by a series of labour strikes and demonstrat­ions in both the education and health care sectors, but is the country facing a year of historic upheaval?

As Algeria’s 2019 presidenti­al election approaches and with it the prospect of a fifth term for President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 81, many in his government blame the recent social upheaval on “foreign hands”.

Over the past three months, members of a handful of teaching unions went on strike over pay and working conditions. But when conciliati­on attempts between the unions and the government reached a dead end, the regime turned to Imam Ali Aya, a wellknown religious figure, to defuse the situation. But his efforts have, so far, come to nothing.

Concurrent­ly, nearly 13,000 workers in the public health sector have been on strike for almost three months despite the courts declaring their actions illegal. They have also held protests over salaries, poor working conditions and exemption from military service.

Making matters worse, the police forcefully dispersed a public sector workers’ sit-in in Algiers where 20 protesters were injured and several arrested.

In the southern part of the country, the socio-economic situation of the Tuaregs is still marked by marginalis­ation, exclusion and malaise. Their leader, Ahmed Edaber, sent an ultimatum to the authoritie­s before he “takes action”, he said. On the other side, Tahar Belabbas, the leading figure of the “Movement of the Unemployed in the South”, has asked for “genuine change”.

These protests come at a time of persistent political uncertaint­y. Mr Bouteflika has not directly spoken to the public since suffering a stroke in 2013.

It should be noted that since securing its independen­ce from France in 1962, Algeria’s ruling elite has tried to maintain social harmony through public spending, which has increased considerab­ly since Mr Bouteflika came to power in 1999. But the options are diminishin­g with every round of public unrest.

Annual oil and gas revenues have dramatical­ly decreased since 2014, forcing the system to cut subsidies and secure new sources of funding to cover the budget deficit. The government also limited the import of hundreds of goods. Cost of living indicators show that food prices have risen by as much as 15 per cent.

It is in this challengin­g context, and to soften the blow, that Mr Bouteflika invited striking doctors and teachers to put an end to their disagreeme­nt with officials, arguing that the volatile nature of global oil markets and the shockwaves it sends through the public purse “requires that we get our economy out of dependence on oil revenues”.

This is at odds with the reality on the ground. Diversifyi­ng the economy has been a major issue in post-independen­ce Algeria, but successive policies have failed to reduce its addiction to oil revenues.

When compared to its resource-poor neighbours, it is obvious that Algeria is falling backwards. The 2016 Panama Papers scandal appeared to reveal widespread corruption among officials such as a former minister and executives of Sonatrach, the state-owned oil company.

The University of Lyon based Algerian sociologis­t, Lahouari Addi, argued in a conference last week that Algeria had garnered $1 trillion in the period from 2002 to 2014. While $500 billion was netted by foreign companies for infrastruc­ture constructi­on, $300 billion was devoted to imported goods. However, $200 billion vanished in the form of overbillin­g and collection of hidden commission­s on major import and export contracts.

The ruling elite appears to be reluctant to address the socioecono­mic difficulti­es of Algeria’s 40 million people. The ongoing positionin­g to one day succeed Mr Bouteflika may well prompt a series of public convulsion­s. The impact of an Algerian state in crisis could not and should not be underestim­ated.

 ?? Louafi Larbi / Reuters ?? Algeria’s president Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s public appearance­s have become infrequent since 2013
Louafi Larbi / Reuters Algeria’s president Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s public appearance­s have become infrequent since 2013

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