Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Algeria election gets low turnout amid opposition boycott

Algeria held its first parliament­ary election since a 2019 uprising. But the women-led Hirak movement boycotted the vote, citing repression and "old guard" networks.

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Algeria’s election authority head Mohamed Chorfi said late on Saturday that the turnout in the country's parliament­ary elections had reached 30.2%.

The vote, earlier in the day, was the first legislativ­e poll since former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika was ousted.

The vote to select 407 parliament­arians for five years was called amid renewed reform protests.

President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune called the election in February — bringing it forward from 2022 — after returning from medical treatment for COVID-19 in Germany.

Two parties urged boycott

Algerian political parties, formerly in government, urged a

big turnout, but two main parties in Kabylie, a mainly Berber region, issued boycott calls, as did many members of the loosely-knit Hirak protest movement, citing the potential for fraud.

Samir Belarbi, a prominent figure of Hirak, which has long advocated a purge of Algeria's army-backed elite, said: "elections will not give the regime legitimacy."

Contesting Saturday's election was the once-governing National Liberation Front (FLN), and Islamist parties, split into five factions.

Low turnout

While the government hoped that the vote would turn a page on political unrest amid a crackdown on dissent, a high abstention rate was noticeable, news agencies reported.

At Algiers ballot stations Saturday morning only a trickle of people were seen entering. At

Bejaia and Tizi Ouzon in Kabylie, most polling stations were closed.

After the polls closed, the electoral commission said turnout was just 30.2%, the lowest in at least 20 years for a legislativ­e poll.

Last November, a referendum on disputed constituti­onal changes drew only 23% of eligible voters.

Dissidents and reporters arrested

Deploring pre-election clampdowns that saw seven leading dissidents and journalist­s detained last Thursday, Said Salhi, deputy head of the Algerian League for the Defense of Human Rights (LADDH) said "these elections have no democratic value."

"These arrests mark a chilling escalation in the Algerian authoritie­s' clampdown on the rights to freedom of expression and associated," Amnesty Inter

national said, adding that more than 200 people had been detained.

Algeria, Africa's fourth-largest economy, which won independen­ce from France in 1962, is still heavily dependent on oil revenues.

These have slumped during the global pandemic-induced economic slowdown, with foreign currency reserves down four-fifths on Algeria's holdings in 2013.

Unemployme­nt stands, officially, at more than 12%, according to World Bank data.

ipj/mm (dpa, Reuters, AFP)

 ??  ?? There were many calls to boycott the "undemocrat­ic" election
There were many calls to boycott the "undemocrat­ic" election
 ??  ?? Results are expected in the coming days
Results are expected in the coming days

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