Algeria presidential hopefuls jailed for fraud

Election officials count the ballots at a polling station during the presidential election, in Algiers on September 7, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 26 May 2025
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Algeria presidential hopefuls jailed for fraud

  • Businesswoman Saida Neghza, former minister Belkacem Sahli, and a relative unknown named Abdelhakim Hamadi were sentenced to 10 years in prison each on charges of paying to obtain the signatures needed to run for the presidential elections

ALGIERS: Three former presidential hopefuls were among dozens of defendants sentenced to prison on charges of electoral fraud, a judicial source said.

Businesswoman Saida Neghza, former minister Belkacem Sahli, and a relative unknown named Abdelhakim Hamadi were sentenced to 10 years in prison each on charges of paying to obtain the signatures needed to run for the presidential elections last September, the source said.

On May 8, the public prosecution had requested penalties of 10 years in prison and a fine of one million Algerian dinars ($7,600) in a trial that lasted for just nine days.

About 70 other people, including three of Neghza’s sons, were also sentenced to between five and eight years in prison.

The majority of them were members of local councils and were accused of giving their electoral signatures to the would-be candidates in exchange for cash payments.

None of the three hopefuls were ultimately able to register their candidacy in the election in which Abdelmadjid Tebboune won in a landslide.

Those wishing to run for the presidency are required to gather 600 signatures from elected officials in 29 out of Algeria’s 58 provinces.

Alternatively, they can gather 50,000 signatures from regular constituents registered to vote, provided that there are at least 1,200 in each province.

In early August, the public prosecution announced that 68 people had been arrested on charges of “buying signatures” for three presidential hopefuls.


Two Syrian soldiers injured during mine-clearing in Latakia 

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Two Syrian soldiers injured during mine-clearing in Latakia 

  • Engineering units were removing mines and unexploded ordnance from agricultural land and forested areas in the village of Nahshaba
  • Mines and unexploded ordnance left by the former Bashar Assad regime continue to pose a significant hazard to civilians in various parts of Syria

LONDON: Two members of the Syrian army engineering unit were injured on Tuesday when an anti-personnel mine detonated during a clearance operation in Latakia countryside, near the Mediterranean.

Engineering units were removing mines and unexploded ordnance from agricultural land and forested areas in the village of Nahshaba, located in the Jabal Al-Akrad region, according to the Syrian Arab News Agency.

The operation is part of a nationwide effort to secure areas affected by the country’s civil war, which lasted from 2011 to 2024, and to allow residents to return to their villages. Mines and unexploded ordnance left by the former Bashar Assad regime continue to pose a significant hazard to civilians in various parts of the Syrian Arab Republic, the SANA added.

Last week, two members of the Syrian Internal Security Forces were killed, and three were injured by a landmine in Al-Sanamayn, a city in the Daraa province of southern Syria.