Algerian Spring?


By John Metzler

UNITED NATIONS ― For nearly two months, large demonstrations have rocked Algeria. The people are protesting against the candidacy of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who planned to run for a fifth five-year term in national elections.

The protests evoked the so-called Arab Spring in which demonstrations and later armed revolts reverberated from Tunisia to Syria to topple and challenge long-entrenched authoritarian rulers.

But what appeared to be a brief whiff of democracy in 2011 soon turned into the Arab Winter with widening chaos in Libya, renewed military rule in Egypt, and churning carnage in Syria.

Will Algeria be different?

After all, this North African land has already experienced a brutal civil war in the early 1990s between Islamic fundamentalists and the current ruling regime in which 200,000 died.

No matter that President Bouteflika, 82, who suffered a stroke in 2013 and has rarely been seen in public since, would be a mere figurehead for le pouvoir (the power) the country's secretive Deep State, a powerful political/military/business establishment that runs the resource-rich North African state as a secular cash cow.

To their credit, the masses of mostly young Algerians who pour into the streets of Algiers have focused more on democratic protest than revolutionary confrontation; most of the population of 44 million are young and know only the rule of the current president in power since 1999.

Indeed, while Bouteflika likely saved the country from a far worse fate that was a generation ago. But times have changed and le pouvoir has become a corrupt autocracy.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres "salutes the mature and calm nature in which the Algerian people have been expressing their desire for change." A statement from Guterres added that he "looks forward to a peaceful and democratic transition process that reflects the wishes of the Algerian people."

Since independence from France in 1962, the ruling FLN party has served as the authoritarian gatekeeper of Algerian politics; control, patronage and fuzzy Arab socialism embody the once revolutionary movement of Ben Bella who still basks in the aura of the independence struggle that fought France and became a leftwing darling of the Third World.

Algerians, especially the young who do not personally remember the independence war from France in the 1950s, or the bloody Islamic conflict in the 1990s,view the ruling party as deeply corrupt. Protesters of the "Arab Street" wished to oust not only Bouteflika but all the denizens of his entrenched regime.

Bouteflika was disparagingly known as the president in the picture frame. Since his tragic illness, he has not spoken nor carried out his duties.

According to Le Point columnist Kamel Daoud, his official pose was photo-shopped and oil paintings of the leader were presented to loyalists. Yet as Daoud says, "The use of the portrait, triumphs humiliation and insults surrealism and has become the subject of national mockery in Algeria."

Now that Bouteflika has resigned, the powerful military has jockeyed to grab power.

Algeria is strategically placed along the Mediterranean coast, bordering Tunisia, Libya, Morocco, Mali, Niger, and Mauritania. It forms part of the nexus of people-smuggling routes from sub-Saharan Africa to the coast.

While lawless Libya poses a far more immediate threat for illegal migrants going to Europe, this could change if Algeria were to face instability or civil conflict.

Algeria is four times the size of France, the former colonial power. Its GDP, largely due to huge oil and gas deposits, creates a $5,000 per capita income.

In 2017, Algeria exported $22 billion in oil and $14 billion in natural gas. While Europe remains the major market taking nearly two-thirds of production, the U.S. remains a key importer as well.

Yet the crisis of rising expectations, combined with a staggering youth unemployment rate of 29 percent, underscores the challenge for any new government be it from the military ranks, le pouvoir's hidden hand, or the free choice of the ballot box.

Here lies a ticking demographic time bomb. Should Algeria loosen the reigns of its strict but secular society will there be a revival of the Islamic fundamentalism that shadowed this land in the 1990s?

Will many young Algerians head for France joining an already large North African community? More ominously, will Algeria become a conduit for migrants from sub-Saharan Africa, thus increasing tensions inside Europe?

Interim President Abdelkader Bensalah has been named before elections that must be held in three months. Can the people keep their cool and will le pouvoir allow the vote? The game is hardly over.


John Metzler (jjmcolumn@earthlink.net) is a United Nations correspondent covering diplomatic and defense issues. He is the author of "Divided Dynamism: The Diplomacy of Separated Nations: Germany, Korea, China."



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