Wednesday, 27 Nov 2024

Huge Crowds of Algerians Protest Army’s Latest Compromise Offer

PARIS — Tens of thousands of protesters in Algeria turned out Friday to demonstrate against the government’s latest attempt to pull the country out of its political impasse, clearly signaling popular rejection of a compromise offer by the Army this week.

The demonstration, the sixth in a row, appeared to reinforce the deadlock: protesters have dismissed the proposal from the country’s most powerful figure, Gen. Ahmed Gaïd Salah, the army chief of staff, to sideline the ailing president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, install as interim president the head of the Senate, and hold elections.

What happens next is unclear, but some opposition figures said it was now up to the government to make what one called a more serious offer. The crowds in the streets, increasingly pressing in their demands, want the wholesale removal of what they call “the System” — everyone associated with Mr. Bouteflika’s 20-year reign. So far the government has given no sign of conceding.

In proposing Mr. Bouteflika’s removal, General Gaïd Salah, who had been the president’s staunchest ally, went beyond what many had expected. But by invoking Article 102, of the Algerian constitution, a section that calls for the removal of the president if he is found unfit, the general left the rest of the ruling “System” in place — unacceptable in the eyes of many Algerians.

Algeria’s politics, frozen under Mr. Bouteflika, with an acquiescent populace cowed by the prospect of a return to the chaos of the 1990s civil war, is the most unsettled in many years.

The demonstration on Friday was the biggest yet, observers there said, with a more determined crowd than ever. Protesters held up signs playing on the French for “102” — which spoken out loud sounds like “Without two” — and the signs carried portraits of Mr. Bouteflika and his influential brother, Saïd, whom many say is the regime’s real string-puller.

“I’m demonstrating against the system. We want it gone. There’s too much injustice,” said Yazid Zabchi, a 60-year-old retired teacher seated beside a metro station in downtown Algiers on Friday. “It’s too late to apply Article 102,” Mr. Zabchi continued, “and this wouldn’t be a change, anyway, it would just be for them.”

Abdelkader Amirouche, a shopkeeper, held up a sign that mimicked the automated voice for wrong telephone numbers: “The number you have dialed, 102, is incorrect. Please dial 07,” — the article in the Algerian constitution that declares, “The people are the source of all power.”

Mr. Amirouche agreed that “we can’t accept 102, because it only serves their interests.”

“We want Article 7 to be applied because it gives the last word to the people,” he said. “And we are going to continue until they give up. We’re not afraid. We’re only afraid of God.”

“We don’t want their elections,” Mr. Amirouche went on. “We don’t trust them any longer.”

Critics of the government said the size of Friday’s crowds left no doubt that General Gaïd Salah’s offer was unacceptable.

“This was a response to the proposal to apply the 102, which would leave the symbols of the current system in place to manage the transition,” Mostefa Bouchachi, a human rights lawyer in Algiers who has emerged as a leading opposition figure, said in a telephone interview.

“The message is very clear,” Mr. Bouchachi continued. “We don’t want these symbols of a corrupted system that has betrayed the popular will. We want real change. All of those who have been in government up until now, we want these people to leave. And we want a government of national unity to make this transition, men and women who are clean, who have not taken part in the misrule of the last 20 years.”

Whether the demand for a wholesale housecleaning is realistic remains to be seen. Large vested interests, financial and political, are at stake. Many in the ruling elite, including in the army, have profited hugely from sweetheart deals, favorable loans by state banks and the state’s largess.

Many of Mr. Bouteflika’s erstwhile allies have deserted him in recent weeks as the demonstrations have gained the upper hand. Words that could have landed their speakers in jail five months ago have suddenly become acceptable.

“The Bouteflika regime is nothing but a cancer that is corrupting the body of the state,” Seddik Chihab, a leading member of Mr. Bouteflika’s coalition partner, the RND party, said on Algerian television this week. “We’ve all got to recognize this.”

General Gaïd Salah himself has praised the demonstrators’ patriotism. But that does not appear to be enough. His “offer is rejected from top to bottom,” said Abdoulmoumène Khelil, general-secretary of the Algeria human rights league, in a telephone interview from Algiers.

“The citizens have understood that 102 simply means a rearranging of power, and not a democratic transition, that will allow the establishment of a new republic, and above all, new people,” said Mr. Khelil.

“The message is clear,” he said, “and I hope it will be understood by those in power, and that they will come back with a more serious offer.”

Hadjer Guenanfa contributed reporting from Algiers.

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