WED 27 - 11 - 2024
Declarations
Date:
Mar 5, 2019
Source:
The Daily Star
Bouteflika: From revered revolutionary to ailing recluse
Lamine Chikhi| Reuters
ALGIERS: President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, a veteran of the war for independence who has ruled Algeria for two decades, is again fighting for survival, this time facing a wave of protests by crowds angry at his plans to seek a fifth term of office. Bouteflika, 82, has rarely been seen in public since a stroke in 2013. He appeared in a wheelchair in Algiers in April last year but is now reported to be in a Swiss hospital.
Nonetheless he is standing in next month’s election, aiming to extend his dominance of a country still struggling with economic and political stagnation under a system little reformed since independence from France in 1962.
An offer to call new elections within a year if he wins on April 18 was greeted by a fresh bout of anti-government protest in Algiers and other cities.
A fighter in the 1954-1962 war to end French colonial rule, Bouteflika became the first foreign minister of his newly independent country and a force behind the Non-Aligned Movement that gave a global voice to Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Bouteflika championed post-colonial states, challenged what he saw as the hegemony of the United States and helped turn his country into a seedbed of 1960s idealism.
He welcomed Che Guevara. Black Panther Eldridge Cleaver, on the run from U.S. police, was given refuge. Cleaver held court in his Algiers safe house with Timothy Leary, the drug-taking high priest of U.S. counterculture.
A young Nelson Mandela received his first military training in Algeria, whose revolution inspired the South African.
As president of the U.N. General Assembly, Bouteflika invited Yasser Arafat to address the body in 1974, a historic step towards international recognition of the Palestinian cause.
By the end of the 1970s, though, Bouteflika had fallen from favor at home and went into exile. He returned to public life when Algeria was being ravaged by a conflict with Islamist militants which killed an estimated 200,000 people.
First elected president in 1999, he negotiated a truce to end the fighting and wrested power from the secretive military-based establishment known as “le pouvoir” (the power).
Helped by oil and gas revenues, Algeria became more peaceful and richer. But it remains mired in corruption and political and economic torpor in a region where uprisings changed neighboring countries.
With a hefty cushion of foreign reserves at its disposal and its people wary of major upheaval after their civil war, Algeria avoided the Arab spring revolutions that toppled leaders across the region in 2011.
But protests against poor living standards, the lack of job opportunities and services are common, and foreign investors are keen for economic reforms that will cut the red tape that often hampers business.
Some biographers say Bouteflika was born in Tlemcen, western Algeria, and others give his place of birth as Oujda, over the Moroccan border.
At the age of 19, he joined the rebellion against French rule as a protege of Houari Boumediene, a commander who would later become Algerian president.
After independence, Bouteflika became minister for youth and tourism, aged 25. The following year he was made foreign minister.
Dressed in the tailored suits and sunglasses that were fashionable in the 1960s, Bouteflika became a spokesman for states emerging from colonial rule. The cachet Algeria earned from defeating France lent him added authority.
Bouteflika demanded that Communist China be given a seat in the United Nations. He railed against apartheid rule in South Africa.
The invitation to Arafat to address the General Assembly was explosive. Only two years before, Palestinian gunmen took hostage and killed members of the Israeli team at the Olympic Games in Munich. Bouteflika watched from the chairman’s dais as Arafat, a gun holster on his waistband, addressed the assembly in New York.
When pro-Palestinian militant Illich Ramirez Sanchez, better known as “Carlos the Jackal,” kidnapped oil ministers from an OPEC meeting in Vienna in 1975, he demanded to be flown with his hostages to Algiers. Bouteflika was shown on camera embracing Carlos at the airport before they sat down to negotiate the hostages’ release.
When Boumediene died in 1978, Bouteflika lost his mentor. He was replaced as foreign minister and an investigation was launched into financial impropriety. Bouteflika said the allegations were invented as part of a political plot.
He left Algeria in the early 1980s and settled in Dubai, where he became an adviser to a member of the emirate’s ruling family. He returned home in 1987 but kept a low profile, refusing offers of government posts.
In the meantime, Algeria was unraveling. The military-backed government annulled a parliamentary election in 1992 which Islamists had been poised to win.
In the conflict that followed, whole villages were massacred and civilians walking in city streets had their throats slit.
Bouteflika, backed by the military, was elected president in 1999 with a pledge to stop the fighting. Against fierce opposition from the establishment, he gave an amnesty to militants who laid down their arms. The violence declined dramatically.
He won re-election in 2004 and again in 2009, although his opponents said the votes were rigged. Through a series of ferocious turf battles with his security forces behind the scenes, Bouteflika had, by the start of his third term, become Algerian’s most powerful president in 30 years.
He consolidated that power last year by dismissing about a dozen top military officers.
Little is known about his private life. Official records mention no wife, though some accounts say a marriage took place in 1990. Bouteflika lived with his mother, Mansouriah, in an apartment in Algiers, where she used to prepare his meals.
Age and poor health caught up with him. French doctors operated on him in 2005 for what officials said was a stomach ulcer.
Leaked U.S. diplomatic cables said he was suffering from cancer. He became weaker after his mother died in 2009.
Bouteflika said in a speech in Setif, in eastern Algeria, in May 2012 that it was time for his generation to hand over to new leaders. “For us, it’s over,” he said.
Months later at the start of 2013, a stroke put him into a Paris hospital for three months. He was seen little in public after returning to Algeria to convalesce. Swiss TV says he is in currently hospital in Geneva.
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