Kuwait Times

Algeria elects parliament amid protests

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ALGIERS: Algeria voted yesterday in a parliament­ary election overshadow­ed by a crackdown on a long-running protest movement that has campaigned for a mass boycott. Pro-government parties have urged a big turnout for the “crucial vote” which they hope will restore stability after two years of turmoil since the forced resignatio­n of veteran president Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

The protest movement, which had held weekly demonstrat­ions for reform until they were effectivel­y banned last month, has denounced the election as a “sham” that betrays the hopes of the hundreds of thousands of Algerians whose protests forced Bouteflika from power.

Seven leading protest movement figures were arrested ahead of polling day while police deployed heavily in the capital Algiers to preempt any attempt to rally. Polls close at 7:00 pm (1800 GMT) and results are not expected before the coming days. Authoritie­s are hoping for a solid turnout, but the two previous national votes since Bouteflika stepped down-a presidenti­al election and a constituti­onal referendum-both saw record low voting after the protest movement urged a boycott.

In Algiers, only a trickle of people were seen entering polling stations yesterday morning, with most people getting on with their daily lives. “I’ve never voted, and this time it’s no different. I don’t believe it would change anything,” said Fatiha, a shopkeeper in her 50s.

Hamid, a 60-year-old office manager, said he had voted for the sake of “stability”. “We are surrounded by danger. Those who reject this election aren’t putting forward any realistic alternativ­e,” he said.

In the opposition stronghold of Kabylie, a mainly Berber region east of the capital, most polling stations in the main cities of Bejaia and Tizi Ouzou remained closed, said Said Salhi, deputy head of the Algerian League for the Defence of Human Rights (LADDH). Boycott calls from the region’s two main parties were almost universall­y respected in the previous two votes since Bouteflika’s ouster.

President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune, who was elected on an official turnout of less than 40 in late 2019, put a brave face on the likely low legislativ­e turnout.

“For me, it’s not the turnout percentage that’s important, it’s whether the lawmakers that the people elect have sufficient legitimacy,” the president said after casting his vote at a polling station on the outskirts of Algiers. More than 13,000 candidates are standing for the 407 seats in parliament, more than half listed as “independen­t”.

The LADDH vice-president deplored the crackdown that preceded the vote. The “repressive atmosphere and the restrictio­ns placed on human rights and freedoms mean these elections have no democratic value”, Salhi said. The protest movement has urged boycotts of all national polls since it mobilised hundreds of thousands of people in 2019 to force Bouteflika and his cronies from power, after the ailing president launched a bid for a fifth term. It returned to the streets in February after an almost-year-long break caused by the Covid pandemic. —

 ?? AFP ?? ALGIERS: Algeria’s President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune waves as he departs after voting at a polling station in Bouchaoui, on the western outskirts of Algeria’s capital Algiers yesterday during the 2021 parliament­ary elections. —
AFP ALGIERS: Algeria’s President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune waves as he departs after voting at a polling station in Bouchaoui, on the western outskirts of Algeria’s capital Algiers yesterday during the 2021 parliament­ary elections. —

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