Tens of thousands of Algerians call on Bouteflika to step down

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Riot police officers detain a man protesting in Algiers against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's plan to extend his 20-year rule. (Reuters)riot police officers clash with people protesting against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's plan to extend his 20-year rule by seeking a fifth term in April elections in Algiers, Algeria, March 1, 2019. REUTER
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Riot police clash with people protesting against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's plan to extend his 20-year rule by seeking a fifth term. (Reuters)
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Demonstrators gather during a protest to denounce President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's bid for a fifth term, in Algiers, Algeria, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2019. (AP)
Updated 02 March 2019
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Tens of thousands of Algerians call on Bouteflika to step down

  • About a dozen people wounded in Algiers after being hit by batons, tear gas grenades and stones
  • Other rallies were held in Algeria’s second and third cities, Oran and Constantine

ALGIERS: Tens of thousands of people in cities across Algeria called on President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to leave office on Friday in the biggest anti-government demonstrations there since the Arab Spring eight years ago.
The protests were mostly peaceful but as crowds receded by late afternoon, scuffles broke out in the capital Algiers between police and protesters near the presidential palace, witnesses said.
On person died during a stampede, an informed source said. Local media said it was a 60-year old man who had collapsed but no more details were immediately available.
Several protesters and policemen were wounded during clashes in Algiers, state televison said, without giving further details.
Earlier a sea of people, young and old, had thronged the streets after Friday prayers, chanting “Bye, bye Bouteflika!” and “Peaceful! Peaceful!.” Many were draped in the Algerian flag and carried placards and banners.
Large scale demonstrations — rarely seen in Algeria — against plans for Bouteflika to seek a fifth term in power in April elections began a week ago but Friday saw the biggest turnout yet.
The 81-year-old suffered a stroke in 2013 and has been seen in public only a few times since. His re-election bid stoked resentment among Algerians who believe he is not fit to lead.
“Look at the Algerian youth, all they are demanding is a valid president who can talk to the people,” said Hamdane Salim, a 45-year-old public sector worker. “Twenty years are enough,” said Khadidja, a woman accompanied by her husband and children.
Among the crowd was Djamila Bouhired, 83, a heroine of the 1954-1962 independence war against France, who told reporters: “I’m happy to be here.”
After hours of marching, many protesters began walking home but some stayed on, dancing and singing.
“This is a celebration, not a protest. We are celebrating Algeria’s rebirth,” said Ali Selmi. “It’s like the end of a football match and Algeria won 3-0.”
Mohammed Saadi, another young man, said: “Our battle will continue until we win.”
Later Reuters TV footage showed police in riot gear and protesters facing off on a street near the presidential palace swathed in tear gas. Witnesses said clashes resulted in injuries on both sides.
Large crowds also gathered in the cities of Oran, Constantine, Setif, Tizi Ouzou and Bouira, residents and local media said.
Bouteflika, who will turn 82 on Saturday, has not directly addressed the protests. The authorities said last he would travel to Geneva for unspecified medical checks, although there was no official confirmation he had traveled.
Local television stations reported the protests but there was no live coverage. State television and the official news agency APS both provided rare coverage of the march which they said had had been largely peaceful.
State media had on Tuesday started covering the dissent after journalist employees pressured management.

Arab spring
Many Algerians for years avoided politics in public fearing trouble from the omnipresent security services or disillusioned as the country has been run by the same group of veterans since the 1954-1962 independence war with France.
There appeared to be few such inhibitions on Friday.
“People want to overthrow the regime,” some chanted, using a slogan from the 2011 “Arab spring” turmoil which toppled leaders in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia.
Bouteflika himself has ruled since 1999 and stamped out a decade-long Islamist insurgency early in his rule. Many Algerians have long tolerated a political system with little space for dissent as a price to pay for peace and stability.
But the new protest waves appears to have broken the long taboo on public discussion of politics.
According to Bouteflika’s opponents, there is no evidence he is fit enough to lead the country and that it is being ruled in his name by advisers. Authorities say he retains a firm grip on public affairs despite the rarity of his appearances.
A weak and divided opposition faces high hurdles in mounting an electoral challenge. Since the long-ruling FLN party again picked Bouteflika as its presidential candidate, several parties, trade unions and business groups have endorsed him.
Lower oil prices in recent years have damaged Algeria’s economy, rekindling discontent and making it more difficult to buy off dissent, as in 2011, when authorities expanded a welfare state. 


Settlers launch multiple attacks on West Bank villages

Israeli soldiers stand guard during a weekly settlers’ tour in Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Saturday. (Reuters)
Updated 9 sec ago
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Settlers launch multiple attacks on West Bank villages

  • Armed raids, assaults continue against Palestinian residents under Israeli military protection

RAMALLAH: Armed Israeli settlers attacked the villages of Al-Mughayir, located northeast of Ramallah, and Yabrud to the east on Saturday, according to local sources.

The sources told the Palestinian Wafa news agency that settlers stormed the Al-Qala’a area east of Al-Mughayir and fired live bullets at residents who confronted them, though no injuries were reported.
The sources added that Israeli forces stormed the area, deploying sound grenades and tear gas against residents, and spread throughout the old park of the village and near homes.
Also, settlers attacked residents near Yabrud, while two armed colonists trespassed on Palestinian-owned lands in Umm Safa, northwest of Ramallah.
Also on Saturday, settlers stormed the Bedouin village of Shalal Al-Auja, located to the north of the city of Jericho.
According to local sources, dozens of Israeli settlers raided the community, spread out among residents’ homes, and deliberately grazed their livestock on farmlands, causing massive damage to crops.
The attacks comes as part of a systematic policy targeting Bedouin communities, aimed at depriving the population of the most basic necessities of life and pushing them towards forced displacement.
Settlers attacked a young man from the town of Beit Furik, east of Nablus, on Saturday as he was traveling along the road connecting the towns of Biddya and Saniriya, west of Salfit.
Local sources said that the group attacked Sharhabil Al-Tawil, assaulting him before seizing his vehicle.
A settler, under the protection of the Israeli army, grazed his sheep on Saturday on Palestinian-owned land in the village of Al-Mughayyir, east of Ramallah.
Local sources said that the settler grazed his sheep in the southern part of the village before residents confronted him.
The sources added that Israeli forces then raided the area, fired live ammunition toward residents, and forced them to return to their homes to provide protection for the colonists.
According to AFP, Israeli forces arrested three suspects after dozens of Israeli settlers stormed an area near a West Bank village on Thursday, injuring two Palestinians and vandalizing property.
The army said that soldiers were dispatched after receiving news of “dozens of masked Israeli suspects vandalizing property in the area” of Shavei Shomron, an Israeli settlement near Nablus.
The settlers “set Palestinian vehicles on fire” and “attacked a Palestinian who was inside one of the vehicles,” the army said, adding that two Palestinians were injured as a result.