Algeria pardons historian jailed for denying indigenous culture

Mohamed Amine Belghit. (X @algatedz)
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Updated 15 December 2025
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Algeria pardons historian jailed for denying indigenous culture

  • Belghit was initially sentenced in July to five years in prison, but an appeals court reduced it to three years, with two suspended

ALGEIRS: Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune on Monday pardoned historian Mohammed Amine Belghit, who was jailed for questioning the existence of Algeria’s indigenous Amazigh culture.
Often called Berbers, the Amazigh live in communities across North Africa and predate the Arab conquest of the 7th century.
Tebboune “today signed a presidential decree granting a full pardon for the remainder of the sentence of ... Mohammed Amine Belghit, the presidency said in a statement.
Belghit was initially sentenced in July to five years in prison, but an appeals court reduced it to three years, with two suspended.
His conviction came after he said in a televised interview that “the Amazigh language is an ideological project of Franco-Zionist origin,” and that “there’s no such thing as Amazigh culture.”
He was arrested in May and charged with undermining national unity and spreading hate speech, as well as insulting national symbols, prosecutors said at the time.
Belghit, a university professor, is no stranger to controversy.
His remarks have repeatedly sparked outrage, with critics accusing him of historical revisionism and hostility toward the Amazigh.
Algeria granted official status to Tamazight, the language of the Amazigh, in 2016.
The following year, the Amazigh new year celebration Yennayer, was added to the list of national holidays.

 


Tunisia frees prominent lawyer who became vocal critic of president

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Tunisia frees prominent lawyer who became vocal critic of president

  • Souab is a retired administrative judge and lawyer who has repeatedly said the judiciary has lost its independence under Saied

TUNIS: A Tunisian court on Monday ordered the release of prominent lawyer Ahmed Souab, a fierce critic ​of President Kais Saied, his family said, in a move the opposition hopes will pave the way for the release of other jailed opponents.
Souab had been serving a five-year jail term following his arrest and imprisonment last year.
The court gave no reason for its decision at ‌a hearing ‌on Monday. Souab’s lawyers and ​family ‌said ⁠he ​had recently ⁠been suffering health problems.
“This is very good news, and we hope it will be followed by the release of all unjustly imprisoned detainees,” Souab’s brother Mongi told Reuters. “We are on our way to the prison waiting for his release.”
Souab’s arrest sparked ⁠widespread anger among political parties and civil ‌society groups, which saw ‌it as a dangerous escalation of ​a crackdown on ‌dissent and a further entrenchment of authoritarianism in ‌Tunisia.
Souab is a retired administrative judge and lawyer who has repeatedly said the judiciary has lost its independence under Saied.
Last year, he said the judiciary had been ‌destroyed and that judges were under pressure “with a knife to their heads.”
Authorities deemed ⁠his comments ⁠a threat to the judges, detaining him on terrorism-related charges.
Opposition and rights groups say Saied has had full control over the judiciary since he dissolved parliament in 2021 and began ruling by decree. He dissolved the independent Supreme Judicial Council and sacked dozens of judges in 2022.
Most opposition leaders, along with dozens of activists and critical journalists, remain behind bars. The opposition ​says Tunisia has become ​an open-air prison. Saied denies being a dictator or interfering in the judiciary.