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Explainer

Algeria set for a bitterly contested election. What is at stake?

Protesters fear the regime is seeking to reconstitute itself in the vote



People demonstrate with posters in Algiers, Friday, Dec. 6, 2019.
Image Credit: AP

Algiers: Algerians are due to elect a new president on Thursday but a huge protest movement bitterly rejects the vote, fearing it will cement in power politicians close to the disgraced old guard.

A big crowd of protesters marched through central Algiers on Wednesday to demand that a presidential election planned for Thursday be cancelled, chanting that they would not vote in a poll they regard as a charade.

Thousands of people crowded through the capital to demand that the vote be cancelled until the entire ruling elite step down and the military quit politics.

They chanted “No election tomorrow” and held up banners reading “You have destroyed the country”.

Demonstrators demand election be cancelled.
Image Credit: Reuters
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For nine months protesters have marched weekly to demand that the December 12 election not entrench a political elite linked to former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who quit in April when confronted by a wave of people power.

Now the public rejection of the looming election threatens to worsen already deep divisions in the north African country.

Why are protesters against polls?

The protesters fear that a regime in power since 1962 in the former French colony is seeking to reconstitute itself in the vote, despite 40 weeks of persistent demonstrations led by the so-called “Hirak” movement.

The ailing Bouteflika was forced to resign after 20 years in power after mass demonstrations erupted in February against his bid for a fifth term.

Bouteflika.
Image Credit: Reuters
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But the five candidates seeking to replace him all either supported the former leader or participated in his government, and all have been the target of the protesters’ hostility.

Who are the front-runners?

Former prime ministers Ali Benflis, 75, and Abdelmadjid Tebboune, 73, are considered the frontrunners.

Also standing is Azzedine Mihoubi, head of the Democratic National Rally party, the main ally of Bouteflika’s party.

Bringing up the rear are Islamist former tourism minister Abdelkader Bengrina, whose party backed Bouteflika, and Abdelaziz Belaid, a member of a youth organisation that also supported him.

Since campaigning began on November 17, the candidates have avoided making appearances in the large cities of the coastal north, and often announce public meetings at the last minute.

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Protesters demand the vote is cancelled.
Image Credit: Reuters

This has not stopped them from being greeted by jeering demonstrators who sometimes also manage to disrupt campaign meetings, despite a hefty security presence.

Protesters see the candidates as accomplices to the military high command, which since Bouteflika’s resignation has assumed de facto power.

Are candidates resonating with the people?

Not really. Candidates speaking at the sparsely attended rallies have struggled to demonstrate their understanding of Hirak’s demands.

Above all, they are facing an uphill battle to convince people to vote on December 12 in a country where abstention is viewed as the only way to challenge an entrenched system.

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Official figures showed 37 percent of the electorate voted in 2017 legislative polls and 50 percent in the 2014 presidential election.

Algerians have been holding weekly anti-government protests since February.
Image Credit: AFP

But observers say that even those turnout numbers were probably inflated.

Analyst Louisa Dris-Ait Hamadouche told AFP previous elections have been tainted by fraud and “held amid general indifference with a known voter base”, mostly supporters of Bouteflika’s long-ruling National Liberation Front and its allies.

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“Now indifference has given way to active protest,” the political science professor at the University of Algiers said.

What is Salah’s role?

Powerful army chief General Ahmed Gaid Salah has emerged as Algeria’s main post-Bouteflika kingmaker.

Ahmed Gaid Salah
Image Credit: Supplied

An election planned for July 4 was postponed over a lack of viable candidates, plunging the country into a constitutional crisis as interim president Abdelkader Bensalah’s mandate expired that month.

Military-backed authorities are now determined to end the crisis as quickly as possible.

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General Gaid Salah insists that December’s vote enjoys popular backing, citing “spontaneous” small marches of support but ignoring the hostile slogans chanted weekly at huge Hirak rallies.

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