Algeria’s July election date implausible: Media

A protester shouts slogans during a demonstration in Algiers. (AFP)
Updated 27 May 2019
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Algeria’s July election date implausible: Media

  • Despite Bouteflika’s departure, protesters have continued to stage mass demonstrations each Friday

ALGIERS: Algerian media said Monday there was very little chance a presidential election will be held as planned on July 4, after only two candidates — both little known — submitted their candidacies.

“The election ... will without any doubt be postponed or canceled,” the francophone El Watan daily asserted.

The poll was originally meant to take place on April 18, but longtime President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s resignation early last month, on the back of huge street protests, forced a postponement.

To be eligible, the candidates — aeronautical engineer Hamid Touahri and Abdelhakim Hamadi, who heads a veterinary drug company — have to be backed by 600 local councillors and lawmakers or 60,000 voters in more than half the country’s regions.

“There is little chance that these two (candidates) will successfully collect” the required signatures, El Watan said.

Arabic daily Echorouk said there was no doubt that “the Constitutional Council should officially announce the postponement” of the poll.

Touahri and Hamadi met a deadline of midnight on Saturday to submit their candidacies, setting in motion a 10-day period for the Constitutional Council to rule on their eligibility.

Despite Bouteflika’s departure, protesters have continued to stage mass demonstrations each Friday.

They want regime figures including army chief Ahmed Gaid Salah and interim President Abdelkader Bensalah to step down ahead of any poll, and demand new independent institutions to oversee voting.


Syrian authorities find remains of five victims of Assad regime

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Syrian authorities find remains of five victims of Assad regime

  • The remains of the individuals were scattered on open ground near a house in the village of Al-Qashla, near Manbij

LONDON: Syrian authorities completed the recovery of the remains of at least five individuals in eastern Aleppo province, believed to have died due to the brutal practices of the deposed Bashar Assad regime.

The Syrian Civil Defense found the remains of individuals scattered on open ground near a house in the village of Al-Qashla, near Manbij, according to the Syrian Arab News Agency.

They have been surveying and investigating the area since Monday, when the first report of human remains came through, in coordination with the National Authority for the Missing.

Authorities have found multiple mass graves in Syria since the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024.

Last week, authorities reported that the remains of 14 individuals were found in the Adra industrial area, northeast of Damascus, during excavation for mill foundations in the area.

According to the Syrian Network for Human Rights, nearly 177,000 people have been forcibly disappeared in Syria since March 2011.