Khaleej Times

Algerian army chief vows to help unearth graft cases

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algiers — Algeria’s army chief of staff said on Tuesday several big corruption cases would come to light in a crackdown on systemic graft, private channel Ennahar TV reported.

A number of figures from the ruling elite including the finance minister, ex-prime minister and several oligarchs have come under investigat­ion over corruption since mass protests forced President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to resign on April 2.

Lieutenant General Ahmed Gaed Salah, the army chief of staff, gave no names or details on Tuesday but vowed to help the judiciary handle corruption cases freely.

“The judiciary has been freed from all pressures,” he said in a speech at a military base in the eastern city of Constantin­e. “The country will be cleansed of corruption and corrupt people.”

Salah spoke hours after former prime minister Ahmed Ouyahia, who was sacked as part of a cabinet reshuffle two days before Bouteflika resigned, appeared in court as part of a corruption investigat­ion.

There was no immediate comment from Ouyahia or his lawyers. It is up to the court to decide whether there is enough evidence for him to face a formal charge and trial.

“Put Ouyahia in prison,” read a banner held up as dozens of protesters gathered near the court in the capital Algiers. Finance Minister Mohamed Loukal — a former central bank governor who only got the job from Bouteflika last month — appeared in court in relation to an investigat­ion into misuse of public funds, state TV reported.

Former police chief Abdelghani Hamel, who was sacked last year by Bouteflika for undisclose­d reasons, and his son also appeared in court in Tipaza, west of the capital, as part of an investigat­ion into “illegal activities, influence-peddling, misappropr­iation of land and abuse of office”, said state TV. —

 ?? AFP ?? Algerian students during their weekly protests in Algiers. —
AFP Algerian students during their weekly protests in Algiers. —

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