Arab News

Consultati­ons begin to form new Algeria govt after polls

- AFP

Algerian President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune on Saturday began consultati­ons for the formation of a new government, a statement from his office said, following a parliament­ary election marked by low turnout.

Algeria’s incumbent National

Liberation Front (FLN) won the most seats in the June 12 vote that saw record levels of abstention, with turnout at just 23 percent.

Prime Minister Abdelaziz Jarad on Thursday presented his government’s resignatio­n to Tebboune, who asked him to continue handling current affairs.

“In the context of broad political consultati­ons to form a government, President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune received (on Saturday) the Secretary-General of the National Liberation Front, Abou El Fadhl Baadji, and members of the political bureau,” a presidency statement said. “The president also received a delegation representi­ng independen­ts, led by Abdelwahab

Ait Menguelet,” the mayor of Tizi Ouzou, it added.

Ait Menguelet headed an independen­t list in an electorate where the participat­ion rate was less than one percent.

Consultati­ons are scheduled to continue until Wednesday.

The record abstention rate has been seen as a sign of Algerians’ disillusio­nment with and defiance of a political class deemed to have lost much of its credibilit­y.

The ruling FLN, which emerged from Algeria’s long struggle for independen­ce from France in 1962 and was the country’s sole party until the first multiparty elections in 1990, secured 98 of the parliament’s 407 seats.

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