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Author Topic: ALGERIA !  (Read 945 times)
bigron
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« on: February 13, 2011, 04:35:10 AM »

Yesterday Egypt, today Algeria

This was the slogan of the brave protesters in Algiers on Saturday, making the first breach in Algeria's wall of fear


by Karima Bennoune



February 12, 2011

Algiers – In the wake of Friday's historic events in Cairo, over 1,000 peaceful demonstrators defied a ban on protests in Algiers on the Place de 1er Mai on Saturday. The goal of the National Coordination Committee for Change and Democracy, the organisers of what was supposed to have been a march to Martyr's Square, was to call for an end to the 19-year state of emergency, for democratic freedoms, and for a change in Algeria's political system. Invigorated by Cairo's great event, this Saturday in Algiers they chanted slogans like "Djazair Horra Dimocratia" ("A free and democratic Algeria"), "système dégage" ("government out") and indeed, "Yesterday Egypt, today Algeria".

There were small echoes of Egypt. Thousands of police in full riot gear painted the square blue in their uniforms, attempting to occupy the space and prevent the demonstration, yet the protestors remained, for hours risking arrest and beatings, shouting slogans and singing effervescently. A large group of young men, with the obvious cooperation of the police, entered the scene violently, chanting in favour of President Bouteflika (in power since 1999) and attempting to provoke fights with the protestors. (This was so reminiscent of Cairo, that for a moment, one half-expected a charge of men riding camels like in Tahrir Square.) At one point, these youths rushed the bench where I stood taking photographs with journalists, and we all toppled to the ground. Later, the pro-government provocateurs started throwing large stones.

The single most moving part of the day was the women's demonstration. A group of about 50 of the many women present – a few young women in hijab, many other young women in jeans, older, seasoned feminist activists wearing khaffiyehs and dresses – took up position next to the bus station at 1st of May Square holding a large Algerian flag. One of these women, prominent psychologist Cherifa Bouatta, told me on Friday as we watched the celebration in Cairo:

"I have been waiting for this for years. This is the beginning. From the years of terrorism [the 1990s] and what came after, everything seemed lost. Our hopes for a just society were dying. But now the possibilities are fantastic."

On Saturday in 1st of May Square, she and the other women explored those possibilities. They occupied the street; they called for profound political change; they ululated (what Algerians call "pousser les youyous"; a high-pitched glottal chanting); they sang "Kassaman", the national anthem, and "listiqlal" (independence), a song of the anti-colonial movement that freed the country from French rule in 1962 at the cost of a million martyrs. Most importantly, they refused to cede to the police. The pro-Boutef youth repeatedly confronted them, and even began shouting in favour of an Islamic state at one point as a confused riposte to the women.

The most surreal moment came as I watched the unyielding female activists attacked by a group of young policewomen in pants and boots – their own career paths only imaginable thanks to the hard work of some of the very women activists they hit and shoved. A young policewoman, the age of one of the students I teach, slapped me for taking a picture as this occurred. The women protesters' only "crime" had been to stand peacefully on the sidewalk of their own capital city singing the national anthem and calling for democracy.

Reportedly, as many as 350 were arrested during the day. Many were roughed up, including the prominent, 90-year-old lawyer Ali Yahia Abdennour, who is the honorary president of the Algerian League for the Defence of Human Rights (LADDH). Cherifa Khaddar, the redoubtable human rights activist and president of Djazairouna, an association of the victims of the fundamentalist terrorism of the 1990s, whose brother and sister were brutally murdered in 1996 by the Armed Islamic Group (GIA), was arrested twice. I watched in horror as policewomen manhandled her – unfortunately, not an oxymoron.

Just before she was arrested the first time, Khaddar was attacked by a group of the young pro-government "protesters", some of whom attempted to pull her clothes off while another attempted to simulate sex with her. A policewoman dragged her away from this melee, only to help a group of male cops throw her to the ground and arrest her, rather than the perpetrators. Later on, at the police station, she found herself in a cell with 20 other women. Together, they continued the protest, chanting and singing: "My brothers do not forget our martyrs. They are calling you from their tombs. Listen to their voices, you free ones." The police became enraged and attacked the women in the cell, dragging one away by her hair." Khaddar was later released.

The situation is fluid. As the protest waned, the square was taken over by a large group of mostly young male protesters, many from the surrounding neighbourhood. Some of them had previously chanted pro-government slogans and insulted the women demonstrators, but now took up anti-government slogans themselves, talked supportively with the freed Khaddar and challenged the police alone. Hundreds of riot police then brought out their guns, marched in formation and shut down the square altogether. It looked like a scene out of the Costa Gavras film "Z".  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065234/


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http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/feb/12/algeria-egypt

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« Reply #1 on: February 13, 2011, 04:53:45 AM »

Hundreds arrested as Algeria defies protest ban


CTV.ca News Staff



February 12, 2011

Hundreds of Algerian protesters were reportedly arrested on Saturday, as demonstrations demanding democratic reforms were held in spite of a government ban.

The head of an Algerian human rights group says 400 people had been arrested during protests in the capital Algiers, which followed in spirit those that toppled Egypt's authoritarian leader this week.

The Algerian government has attempted to temper protests by banning public demonstrations and blocking the streets of the capital.

Heavily armed police lined up along marching routes on Saturday and set up barricades outside the city to try to stop busloads of demonstrators from entering the city.

Thousands of people defied the ban despite the heavy security presence, taking to the streets to demand President Abdelaziz Bouteflika step down. Bouteflika has led the North African nation since 1999.

Algeria saw five days of rioting in early January amid sky-high food prices, poverty and high unemployment
 
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http://montreal.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20110212/algeria-protest-110212/20110212/?hub=MontrealHome

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« Reply #2 on: February 14, 2011, 04:19:19 AM »

Responding to Egypt’s Revolution,

President Bouteflika Violently Suppresses Protest in Algeria



by Andy Worthington


February 13, 2011


Hopes by those seeking sweeping changes in the Middle East that, after decades of oppressive rule, the power of the people’s revolution in Egypt, which toppled Hosni Mubarak after 30 years of dictatorship on Friday, would spread next to Algeria received a setback at the first hurdle in Algiers on Saturday, when, as Karima Bennoune, an Algerian law professor in New Jersey, explained in a poignant article for the Guardian (cross-posted below), peaceful protestors were beaten up and arrested, although they were subsequently freed.

Public protests are banned in Algeria, but protestors remain hopeful, and those who turned out on Saturday know that, as in Egypt, unemployment, rising food prices, and the harsh realities of life in a brutal authoritarian state (the legacy of the unspeakingly horrific civil war in the 1990s, which, as in so much of the region, involved the meddling of the West) mean that the regime of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is vulnerable to a movement of mass opposition, if a trigger can be found that will enable the people to overcome their fear. As the Algerian psychologist Cherifa Bouatta told Bennoune, while watching the scenes in Tahrir Square, "I have been waiting for this for years. This is the beginning. From the years of terrorism [the 1990s] and what came after, everything seemed lost. Our hopes for a just society were dying. But now the possibilities are fantastic."

Yesterday Egypt, today Algeria
By Karima Bennoune, The Guardian, February 12, 2011


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http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2011/02/13/responding-to-egypts-revolution-president-bouteflika-violently-suppresses-protest-in-algeria/


 
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« Reply #3 on: February 14, 2011, 05:42:05 AM »

US calls for Algerian 'restraint' on protests

A man waves a placard reading "Make Room for Youth" in front of a police cordon during a demonstration on February 12 in Algiers. The United States on Sunday called on Algerian security forces to show "restraint" during anti-government protests inspired by events in Egypt and neighboring Tunisia

Sun Feb 13, 3:11 pm ET
 
WASHINGTON (AFP) – The United States on Sunday called on Algerian security forces to show "restraint" during anti-government protests inspired by events in Egypt and neighboring Tunisia.

The State Department said the rights of the Algerian people "must be respected," after demonstrators fed up with President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's regime clashed with police Sunday, a day after 2,000 protesters were confronted by 30,000 riot police.

"We note the ongoing protests in Algeria, and call for restraint on the part of the security services," State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said in a statement.

"We reaffirm our support for the universal rights of the Algerian people, including assembly and expression," he added. "These rights apply on the internet. Moreover, these rights must be respected."

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110213/pl_afp/algeriaunrestpoliticsusdiplomacy

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