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Algeria's Bouteflika abandons re-election bid after weeks of protest

In Tunisia, The Army gave his support Directly, while The police corpus was in the meantime using force against the people. like we saw in the early times of the Algerian protest.
But Thankfully , our BenAC*nt runaway after the Army gave him the illusion that he "could" come back...
The army as a corps is solidly behind the street..It took 3 Friday of Protest before the Chief of Staff changed his rethorics...The police corps is the inpredictable one , even though, they acted correctly so far..

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EVEN A SWEEDISH GIRL AND HER MOM TOOK PART WITH THE MARCHERS..

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THE EQUIVALENT OF **** OFF IN THE ALGERIAN FOLKS LANGUAGE WAS THE MOST USED WORD IN PROTESTER’S BANNERS.
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THE AVENUE LEADING TO EL MOURADIA CLOSED OFF BY SECURITY FORCES..
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FROM MOSUL, IRAQ...

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THE FIREMEN

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THE ALGERIAN CHIEF OF STAFF, AHMED GAÏD DEMANDS THAT THE ARTICLE 102 OF THE ALGERIAN CONSTITUTION TO BE ENFORCED ...
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A NEW ALGERIA WILL BE BORN THIS COMING FRIDAY! THE STREET HAS WON BEAUTIFULLY....LONG LIVE ALGERIA, THE COUNTRY OF THE FREE AND THE HOME OF THE BRAVE.....
 
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MARCH 11, 2019

ALGIERS (Reuters) - Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika abandoned his bid for a fifth term in power on Monday, bowing to weeks of mass demonstrations against his 20-year rule by people demanding a new era of politics in a country dominated by the old guard.

Youth celebrate on the streets after President Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced he will not run for a fifth term, in Algiers, Algeria March 11, 2019. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
He also postponed an election that had been set for April, and promised social and economic reform.

Bouteflika’s announcement brought crowds back onto the streets in celebration on Monday evening. Hundreds of people, young and old, some draped in the national flag, jumped up and down with excitement. Cars beeped their horns in approval.

“Our protests have borne fruit! We defeated the supporters of the fifth term!” said taxi-driver Mohamed Kaci, 50.

Tens of thousands of people from all social classes have demonstrated almost daily against Bouteflika’s plan to run for re-election, rejecting a political system dominated for nearly 60 years by veterans of the independence war against France.

Bouteflika, 82, has ruled for 20 years but has rarely been seen in public since suffering a stroke in 2013.

His opponents said they did not believe he was fit state to run the country, one of Africa’s biggest oil producers, and suspected he was being kept in place to protect the grip of the military and business elite.

In a series of announcements on Monday evening, the presidency said the election, previously set for April, would be postponed. A new constitution would be submitted to the public for a referendum.

Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia resigned and Interior Minister Noureddine Bedoui, not known as a member of Bouteflika’s inner circle, replaced him. Ramtane Lamamra, a diplomatic advisor to Bouteflika, was named deputy prime minister.

Bouteflika met Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Gaed Salah and veteran Algerian diplomat Lakhdar Brahimi, the kind of widely respected figure the military might look to as a guarantor of stability.

“The voice of the people was has been heard,” Brahimi, a former foreign minister and U.N. special envoy, said on state television after meeting Bouteflika.

“Young people who took to the streets acted responsibly and gave a good image of the country. We must turn this crisis into a constructive process.”

Bouteflika’s statement said his last duty was to contribute to the founding of a new republic and a new system that would be “in the hands of new generations of Algerians”.

A national conference will oversee the transition, draft a new constitution and set the date for elections. It should finish its work by the end of 2019, with elections to follow.

The conference would be headed by an “independent, consensual and experienced national figure”, the statement said.

The protests have mostly been peaceful and Bouteflika’s announcement should have defused the potential for a bloody showdown with security forces, as has been the case in several other Arab nations facing political upheaval in recent years.

Former colonial ruler France welcomed Bouteflika’s decision.

“France expresses its hope that a new dynamic that responds to the aspirations of the Algerian people can get under way quickly,” Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said.

INERTIA SHATTERED

Some of those celebrating on the streets struck a note of caution, saying they wanted a complete overhaul of the political system.

“We have won the battle. This will be a sleepless night,” said 25-year-old Abdelghani Hachi. Nearby, other young Algerians made V-for-victory signs.

Bouteflika, who returned to Algeria on Sunday after medical treatment in Switzerland, has watched one long-time ally after another join the demonstrations calling on him to step down.

More than 1,000 judges said on Monday they would refuse to oversee the election if Bouteflika stood. Clerics said they would not accept government orders about what to preach.

The protests have shattered years of political inertia and unsettled Algeria’s opaque but powerful security establishment.

The demonstrations have been the biggest in Algeria since an election was annulled by the military in 1991, triggering a decade of civil war against Islamists in which 200,000 people were killed.

Bouteflika oversaw the end of the war but under his rule power was concentrated in the hands of a secretive military-based establishment known to Algerians as “le pouvoir” — the powers-that-be.

The security forces have been mostly restrained during the demonstrations, a signal of the establishment’s eroding willingness to keep the president in power through force.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...tion-bid-after-weeks-of-protest-idUSKBN1QS10N


What a mentality of human kind . his one leg is already in grave he is unable to walk still hold on power . This old Thug need to start praying for forgiveness to God instead of holding power . he need to spend time with his grand children more then the people now .
 
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THE ALGERIAN STREET IS DEMANDING THE DEPARTURE OF THE COS.
 
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WITHOUT FORGETTING “THE JASMIN REVOLUTIONARY REPRESENTATIVES” SIDE BY SIDE WITH THEIR SISTER THE “SMILING”ONE..
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Is there a coup going on?
Nope..fake news... But we expect things to begin to move quite rapidly this week to satisfy the demands of the street..The army and the security services , ie police and gendarmerie are with the street..However, there are some remnants from the ex DRS that are réfractaire to the change..They will be , I am sure neutralised , in the coming days...

Picture taken in Algiers few minutes ago...People occupied the street because of rumors spraid by local tv pro regime...
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Car traffic is normal..
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@Ceylal

I am hearing it is an issue within the military, that the military is largely in control and demanding a certain group to turn themselves in. Is this true? And what do you expect in coming weeks, what needs to be done to satisfy demonstrators demands?
 
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@Ceylal

I am hearing it is an issue within the military, that the military is largely in control and demanding a certain group to turn themselves in. Is this true? And what do you expect in coming weeks, what needs to be done to satisfy demonstrators demands?
Everything is foggy at the top...nobody knows what will happen in the next few days...

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@Ceylal why Ali Hadded is arrested at the Tunisia border?
(by the way leaving the country with British passport, quite strange)
what do you think?
 
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@Ceylal why Ali Hadded is arrested at the Tunisia border?
(by the way leaving the country with British passport, quite strange)
what do you think?
He has a lot to answer for corruption , money laundering, tax evasion, he is one piece of many rich created by Bouteflika to corrupt the système in order to stay in power....even as a dead person.. ..He is not the only one..the next few days will tell us more..

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JUST FEW OF THEM..
 
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There is something going on, Chief of Army Staff asked to declare Bouteflika unfit, and it's still not done,This regime is one of the most obscure in the region, who does what, who decides what? We do not understand anything
 
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