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Date: Feb 4, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Algeria to lift 19-year-old state of emergency
Fear of contagion as uprisings’ spread leads president to promise greater freedoms

Friday, February 04, 2011
Christian Lowe and Lamine Chikhi
Reuters

 

ALGIERS: Algeria promised to end a 19-year-old state of emergency and provide more political freedoms Thursday, concessions designed to keep out a wave of uprisings sweeping the region.


The lifting of the state of emergency will happen “in the very near future,” Algeria’s official APS news agency quoted President Abdelaziz Bouteflika as telling a meeting of senior ministers.
Even so, demonstrations still won’t be allowed in the capital of Algiers, Bouteflika said.


The announcement followed pressure from government opponents, some inspired by unrest in Egypt and Tunisia, who demanded the emergency powers be scrapped and are planning a protest in the capital on Feb. 12.


“I hope very much that this is not just another ruse by the authorities … I think that instead of getting to the root of the problem the authorities are just playing for time,” said one of the organizers, Fodil Boumala.
Bouteflika said the government should adopt new measures to promote job creation, a nod to the problem of unemployment which is particularly acute among young Algerians.


Early in January, several Algerian cities were shaken by rioting over food prices which killed two people and injured hundreds. Since then the government has cut prices on staple foodstuffs and made massive wheat purchases to avoid any shortages. 


Bouteflika denounced “regrettable excesses” that took place in the riots, in his first reaction to the events. “There is no justification for the attack on people or property. These excesses are regrettable,” he said. They took place “as the country has never done so much to catch up on its delays and respond to the various social expectations of the population,” Bouteflika said.


The Algerian president also instructed that national television and radio stations – which are controlled by the state and broadcast almost no voices of dissent – give airtime to all political parties.

 

“It is a step in the right direction,” Algerian political analyst Mohammad Lagab said of the proposed changes. “[It] shows that Bouteflika has understood how fragile the situation is.”


However, Bouteflika make clear there would be a limit to the new political freedoms. Restrictions on marches in the capital will stay in force even after the lifting of the state of emergency, he said.


Bouteflika, who is 73 and serving his third term as president, issued a warning to opposition groups. “Freedom should not end in a situation where you have things sliding out of control or anarchy, which have already cost Algeria dear,” he said.


The state of emergency was introduced in 1992, soon after the authorities annulled a parliamentary election which a radical Islamist party was poised to win.


That led to nearly two decades of armed conflict between Islamist insurgents and security forces which killed an estimated 200,000 people and from which the country, a major oil and gas producer, is still emerging.


Algeria’s government had argued it needed the extra powers under the state of emergency to fight Islamist militants linked to Al-Qaeda but the insurgency has abated, sparking public debate about whether those powers are still justified.


“This is clearly a response to the events in Tunisia and Egypt and an attempt by the Algerian authorities to get ahead of the curve and head off popular protests,” said Benjamin Stora, a leading French historian on Algeria. “They would not have dreamed of lifting the state of emergency otherwise.”


There was no indication that the end of the state of emergency would mean that Islamist parties banned two decades ago would now be able to resume their activities.

 



 
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