Daily Nation Newspaper

Bouteflika confirms fresh poll bid despite rallies

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ALGIERS - Algeria's veteran President Abdelaziz Bouteflika has defied protesters by confirming he will run again - but says he will not serve a full term.

In a letter he said if he won next month's vote he would oversee a national dialogue leading to fresh elections that he would not contest.

His decision to seek a fifth term in office sparked nationwide protests.

Bouteflika, 82, has rarely been seen in public since suffering a stroke in 2013.

Sunday saw new protests as a midnight deadline loomed for candidates to register. By nightfall young people were again marching in the capital Algiers despite the president's offer.

Bouteflika's campaign manager submitted papers on behalf of the ailing president, who is undergoing medical treatment in Switzerlan­d.

The electoral commission has said candidates need to submit them in person, but the Constituti­onal Council ruled that he did not have to be physically present.

The proposal came in the form of a letter to the Algerian people read out on state television.

Should he be re-elected. Bouteflika said he would hold an "inclusive national conference" followed by a vote to determine the next president.

He said he would not run again and acknowledg­ed the protests that have rocked Algeria.

So far, six other candidates have formally registered, among them a retired general, Ali Ghediri, who has promised to bring "change" to Algeria.

Businessma­n Rachid Nekkaz, who has a sizeable Facebook following and is said to be popular among Algeria's young, announced plans to run, but was deemed ineligible.

Instead his cousin, a car mechanic who is also called Rachid Nekkaz has entered and the businessma­n says he will serve as his campaign manager.

Two opposition parties, the Labour Party, and the Islamist Movement of Society for Peace, have said they will boycott the election.

A key challenger in previous elections, Ali Benflis, also is not running.

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