Friday, February 11, 2011

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Algeria prepares for day of protests

They should all go! As Mwalimu Oswald Hanciles puts it, Queen of England, 60 years; family 600 years.  Queen of Netherlands, 50 years; family 400 years.  THEY MUST GO!!!! King of Swaziland - 20 years; family - 300 years.  They must go!!!



-----Original Message-----
From: Hetty ter Haar
Sent: Feb 11, 2011 2:25 PM
To: USA Africa Dialogue Series
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Algeria prepares for day of protests

Algeria prepares for day of protests

Pro-democracy alliance expected to defy ban on demonstrations as
euphoria from Egypt and Tunisia spills over to Algeria

Angelique Chrisafis in Paris
Saturday February 12 2011
guardian.co.uk


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/feb/11/algeria-prepares-day-of-protests


Algeria, the oil-rich, military-dominated north African state, braced
itself for a day of pro-democracy protestson Saturday, despite a ban
on demonstrations in the capital, Algiers, and a large security
presence intent on containing any uprising inspired by Egypt or
Tunisia.

A key energy exporter and the biggest country in the Maghreb, Algeria
used its powerful armed forces last month to contain several days of
rioting, triggered by price rises for sugar and cooking oil. At least
five people died and around 800 were injured in demonstrations against
youth unemployment, poor housing and corruption, including several
people who set themselves alight.

Now a hastily formed umbrella group of civil associations,
independent trade unionists and small political parties has called for
a national day of protest on Saturday , under the slogan "Changing the
system". It is calling for an end to 12 years of authoritarian rule by
Abdelaziz Bouteflika and his generals.

In an effort to stop mass protests, Bouteflika said he would use the
country's vast oil and gas wealth to lower the prices of key foods. He
also promised to allow more democratic freedoms, create jobs and lift
a 19-year-old state of emergency that still hangs over the country.

Despite weeks of strikes, including by academics and paramedics,
Algeria has not seen the spontaneous, mass uprisings of Tunisia or
Egypt. Analysts say people want change but are wary of chaos in a
country still traumatised by its violent recent past. More than a
million were killed in the fight for independence from France in 1962,
while up to 200,000 died during the civil war of the 1990s after
elections were scrapped in 1992.

As an important exporter of oil and gas, Algeria has around $150bn (?
93bn) in foreign currency reserves, almost no external debt, and
forecasts economic growth of 4% in 2011. But the energy wealth has not
translated into improvements in people's standard of living. The
unmodernised economy and a clunking bureaucracy create too few jobs
for a country of 35.5 million, where almost half of the population is
under 25. Youth unemployment is thought to be over 35%, with a steady
flow of desperate young people trying to escape the country on
makeshift rafts.

"Algeria needs a revolution, not just the lifting of the state of
emergency," said Hocine Zehouane, chairman of the Algerian League for
Human Rights, one of the groups behind the marches.

Mansouria Mokhefi, Maghreb analyst at the French Institute of
International Relations, said: "I don't think the Algeria situation
will pop in the same way as Tunisia. There isn't the spontaneity of
protest. The Algerians live under a dictatorship, but their case is
different. It's a much richer country, able to redistribute those
riches to relieve some of the worries, frustration and misery.

"Also, the army is much stronger. In Algeria, the army is all-
powerful, holding the reins of power, both political and economic. The
army has a long experience of repression and they didn't hold back
during the protests in January."

She added: "Psychologically, Tunisians were behind an iron curtain,
living in fear and terror and with no means of expression: once they
took to the street, there was a complete feeling they had had enough.

"Algeria is still very traumatised by 10 years of civil war. They are
able to express themselves more or less freely, they can criticise the
government and denounce scandals in the press. Since the food prices
went down, there has been a kind of calm."


guardian.co.uk Copyright (c) Guardian News and Media Limited. 2011

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