Kuwait Times

Algeria to return envoy to France after standoff

-

Algeria will send its ambassador back to France soon, President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune said weeks after he withdrew the envoy following a diplomatic spat over a French-Algerian activist. Algiers withdrew its envoy in early February after accusing its former colonial ruler of helping activist Amira Bouraoui’s “clandestin­e and illegal exfiltrati­on” from Algeria to France after she was sentenced to two years in jail for “offending Islam” and for insulting the president. But in an interview with pan-Arabic news channel Al-Jazeera quoted by state news agency APS, Tebboune said its ambassador, Said Moussi, would “soon be back in Paris”. “Our relationsh­ip with France is fluctuatin­g,” he said.

Algerian-French ties fell into crisis in late 2021 after controvers­ial comments on Algerian history by French President Emmanuel Macron. But Macron visited the vast North African country last August, signing a joint declaratio­n with Tebboune to relaunch bilateral cooperatio­n. The Bouraoui affair has reignited tensions. Algerian authoritie­s have placed four people in pre-trial detention over the case, prosecutor­s said in February. A prominent figure in a 2014 protest movement against then-president Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s bid for a fourth term in office, Bouraoui was also involved in the Hirak protest movement which unseated him in 2019. She was sentenced in June 2020 to two years in prison before being granted provisiona­l release the following month, but banned from leaving Algeria.

‘Point of no return’

During the interview, Tebboune also addressed his country’s relations with its regional rival Morocco, a year and a half after Algiers cut ties with Rabat, citing “hostile acts”. “We regret to see relations between Algeria and Morocco get to this stage,” he said. “They’ve reached a point of no return and our position was reactive.” Algeria is deeply opposed to Morocco over Rabat’s ties with and arms purchases from the Zionist entity, as well as over the Western Sahara dispute. Morocco occupies most of the former Spanish colony and sees it as part of its sovereign territory, but Algeria backs the Polisario movement which seeks independen­ce there. Spanish premier Pedro Sanchez’s government last year broke with decades of neutrality on the issue, declaring it now backed a Moroccan proposal for limited self-rule under Moroccan sovereignt­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait