WED 17 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Dec 21, 2019
Source: The Daily Star
Algerians protest against new president, reject his offer of dialogue
New president sworn in to lead protest-hit Algeria, promises young Cabinet members
Agence France Presse
ALGIERS: Algerian demonstrators Friday rejected a call for dialogue by the country's new president, insisting on a month-long protest movement's demands for sweeping reforms in the North African country.

Huge crowds flooded the streets of Algiers on the 44th consecutive Friday of anti-government protests, a day after establishment insider Abdelmadjid Tebboune was sworn in following his victory in last week's presidential election.

"It's you or us. We will never stop," protesters chanted.

"I don't accept this president... and I am against the dialogue the ruling establishment is offering," said Amar Alileche, a 66-year-old pensionwhatsoeverer protesting against Tebboune.

"Negotiations must lead to the departure of the old regime," he said.

Tebboune, 74, succeeds president Abdelaziz Bouteflika who resigned in April in the face of huge demonstrations after two decades in office.

A former prime minister who served under Bouteflika, Tebboune is seen as close to armed forces chief, Lieutenant General Ahmed Gaid Salah, reviled by protesters and the de facto strongman since Bouteflika quit.

Following his election, Tebboune invited the Hirak protest movement to engage in dialogue as well as vowing to appoint young ministers and push for a new constitution.

But his comments were rejected by the protest movement.

He renewed his offer "to reach out to everyone" during his swearing-in ceremony on Thursday.

He also said that a new constitution would reduce the authority of the president and "guarantee the separation and balance of powers".

But protesters are demanding deep reforms they say should be carried out by "transitional institutions" with no ties whatsoever to member of the former political establishment.

"The Hirak will continue until all its demands are met," said Ali Salhi, 53, an employee with Algerian energy giant Sonatrach.

"There must be a radical change of the system, a transition and a new constitution. We need concrete measure," he said, echoing the comments of other activists.

Protesters also hit the streets in second city Oran despite a heavy police deployment to protest against Tebboune, Said Salhi, vice president of the Algerian human rights group LADDH, said quoting local activists.

New president sworn in to lead protest-hit Algeria, promises young Cabinet members

Agence France Presse, December 20, 2019
ALGIERS: Political establishment insider Abdelmadjid Tebboune was sworn in Thursday as Algeria’s new president, a week after winning elections marred by mass protests and record abstention.

He succeeds veteran leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was forced out in April in the face of mass demonstrations after two decades in office.

Tebboune must now address the grievances of the protesters, who have remained on the streets to prevent what they see as a ploy by the political elite to try to retain its hold on power.

The 74-year-old is seen as close to the armed forces chief, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Gaid Salah, who has been the North African country’s de facto strongman since Bouteflika quit.

He and other top brass attended the swearing-in ceremony alongside Tebboune’s defeated rivals for the presidency. All five candidates in the election had links to Bouteflika, who had clung to power despite suffering a debilitating stroke in 2013.

While Tebboune’s period as prime minister ended with his sacking by Bouteflika, protesters see the longtime regime insider as part of the same corrupt system that has ruled Algeria since independence in 1962 - a system they want dismantled.

Following his election, Tebboune invited the Hirak protest movement to engage in dialogue as well as vowing to appoint young ministers and push for a new constitution - comments rejected by the protest movement. But Thursday he repeated those pledges.

“I renew my engagement to reach out to everyone,” Tebboune said during a speech at the swearing-in ceremony.

The new constitution will reduce the powers of the president and “guarantee the separation and balance of powers,” he said.

Although Tebboune took 58 percent of the vote in last week’s election, avoiding the need for a second-round run-off, the widespread boycott meant he won the support of barely 20 percent of registered voters. By convention, the new president would normally be expected to announce his first major decision, his choice of prime minister, later Thursday.

Whoever Tebboune picks will be carefully scrutinized by the protest movement to assess how serious he is about addressing its grievances.

The president has already said the new government will include some ministers in their 20s, a major change for a country where most are in their 60s or older.

More than 53 percent of Algerians are under the age of 30 and unemployed graduates and school-leavers have been a mainstay of the protest movement.

The young demonstrators accuse the political elite of economic incompetence and of handing out public sector jobs to their cronies not those best qualified.

After nearly a year of political turmoil, there are some Algerians, particularly small businessmen, who yearn for a return to stability and whose support for the protest movement has waned.

But the country’s grinding political crisis may be exacerbated by its economic situation.

Algeria is heavily dependent on oil exports and its budget has been hard hit by low crude prices, which could force Tebboune to take unpopular decisions.


 
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