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Algeria moves forward with disputed constitutional reforms

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Algeria's parliament meets from Wednesday to consider a package of constitutional reforms that authorities say will strengthen democracy but critics have denounced as window dressing.

Analysts say the reforms are meant to address longstanding public grievances in the North African nation, and possibly to prepare for a smooth transition amid concerns for the health of 78-year-old leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

The president and his inner circle have held a firm grip on power since 1999 and, as the end of his rule appears to close in, there are fears of instability in the mainly Muslim country of 40 million, a key energy producer.

Dominated by Bouteflika supporters, Algeria's lower and upper houses are expected to adopt the reforms on Sunday, after the full package is presented by Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal on Thursday.

Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal (right) speaks at the National Assembly in Algiers
Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal (right) speaks at the National Assembly in Algiers
, AFP/File

The main political reforms will see the reintroduction of two-term limits on the presidency -- lifted in 2008 to allow Bouteflika to run for a third time -- and a provision requiring the president to nominate a prime minister from the largest party in parliament.

An independent electoral commission will also be established, the roles of women and youth will be recognised and freedoms of assembly and the press will be explicitly guaranteed.

The Amazigh language spoken by the indigenous Berber population will also be recognised as official, alongside Arabic.

The reforms "strengthen freedoms and enshrine the separation of powers and the principles and values of the Algerian people," Ahmed Ouyahia, Bouteflika's chief of staff, said last week.

Critics disagree, saying the reforms are little more than a show and will do little to reduce the influence of the powerful elite, including Bouteflika's National Liberation Front (FLN) party and army generals, who dominate the country.

- 'Assuaging discontent' -

"This constitutional reform project does not have the concerns of Algeria at its heart but only the current political regime which it is designed to protect," said Ali Beflis, a former prime minister who ran against Bouteflika in 2004 and 2014.

A man waves the Amazigh flag at the funeral in Ait Ahmed village on January 1  2016 of Hocine Ait-Ah...
A man waves the Amazigh flag at the funeral in Ait Ahmed village on January 1, 2016 of Hocine Ait-Ahmed, a fathers of Algeria's struggle for independence and a key opposition figure
Farouk Batiche, AFP/File

The Front of Socialist Forces (FFS) opposition party, whose 30 lawmakers have said they will boycott the vote on the reforms, said the project was "nothing more than the continuation of the tradition of constitutional violence against the Algerian people".

John Entelis, an Algeria expert at Fordham University in the United States, said the reform package was clearly designed to address public concerns.

"Each of these newly inscribed constitutional rights is directed at assuaging the discontent so evident among Berbers, women, youth, civil society activists and political opponents," he wrote last month in The Washington Post.

"Yet given the way this document has been conceived, communicated and constructed, almost all of the discontented groups remain unconvinced that the rhetoric of the state... will in fact be translated into political action."

Bouteflika has appeared rarely in public since suffering a stroke in 2013 and there has been widespread speculation of a behind-the-scenes power struggle over his succession.

A rally at Somoud Square in the Sahara desert village of In-Salah  south Algeria on March 5  2015  a...
A rally at Somoud Square in the Sahara desert village of In-Salah, south Algeria on March 5, 2015, against exploration for shale gas
Farouk Batiche, AFP

In recent months Bouteflika and his supporters have moved to take control of the security services, dissolving the powerful Department of Intelligence and Security (DRS) and jailing or sidelining top officials.

Unlike many countries in the region, including its neighbours Tunisia and Libya, Algeria has been relatively stable in recent years.

But it is facing a range of challenges, including regular jihadist attacks, sporadic outbreaks of violence between Berbers and Arabs and a precipitous drop in state revenues as oil prices have plummeted.

The reforms will also see dual nationals banned from holding high public office, a move that has angered many among the hundreds of thousands of Algerians who also have citizenship in France, the country's former colonial power.

Algeria’s parliament meets from Wednesday to consider a package of constitutional reforms that authorities say will strengthen democracy but critics have denounced as window dressing.

Analysts say the reforms are meant to address longstanding public grievances in the North African nation, and possibly to prepare for a smooth transition amid concerns for the health of 78-year-old leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

The president and his inner circle have held a firm grip on power since 1999 and, as the end of his rule appears to close in, there are fears of instability in the mainly Muslim country of 40 million, a key energy producer.

Dominated by Bouteflika supporters, Algeria’s lower and upper houses are expected to adopt the reforms on Sunday, after the full package is presented by Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal on Thursday.

Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal (right) speaks at the National Assembly in Algiers

Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal (right) speaks at the National Assembly in Algiers
, AFP/File

The main political reforms will see the reintroduction of two-term limits on the presidency — lifted in 2008 to allow Bouteflika to run for a third time — and a provision requiring the president to nominate a prime minister from the largest party in parliament.

An independent electoral commission will also be established, the roles of women and youth will be recognised and freedoms of assembly and the press will be explicitly guaranteed.

The Amazigh language spoken by the indigenous Berber population will also be recognised as official, alongside Arabic.

The reforms “strengthen freedoms and enshrine the separation of powers and the principles and values of the Algerian people,” Ahmed Ouyahia, Bouteflika’s chief of staff, said last week.

Critics disagree, saying the reforms are little more than a show and will do little to reduce the influence of the powerful elite, including Bouteflika’s National Liberation Front (FLN) party and army generals, who dominate the country.

– ‘Assuaging discontent’ –

“This constitutional reform project does not have the concerns of Algeria at its heart but only the current political regime which it is designed to protect,” said Ali Beflis, a former prime minister who ran against Bouteflika in 2004 and 2014.

A man waves the Amazigh flag at the funeral in Ait Ahmed village on January 1  2016 of Hocine Ait-Ah...

A man waves the Amazigh flag at the funeral in Ait Ahmed village on January 1, 2016 of Hocine Ait-Ahmed, a fathers of Algeria's struggle for independence and a key opposition figure
Farouk Batiche, AFP/File

The Front of Socialist Forces (FFS) opposition party, whose 30 lawmakers have said they will boycott the vote on the reforms, said the project was “nothing more than the continuation of the tradition of constitutional violence against the Algerian people”.

John Entelis, an Algeria expert at Fordham University in the United States, said the reform package was clearly designed to address public concerns.

“Each of these newly inscribed constitutional rights is directed at assuaging the discontent so evident among Berbers, women, youth, civil society activists and political opponents,” he wrote last month in The Washington Post.

“Yet given the way this document has been conceived, communicated and constructed, almost all of the discontented groups remain unconvinced that the rhetoric of the state… will in fact be translated into political action.”

Bouteflika has appeared rarely in public since suffering a stroke in 2013 and there has been widespread speculation of a behind-the-scenes power struggle over his succession.

A rally at Somoud Square in the Sahara desert village of In-Salah  south Algeria on March 5  2015  a...

A rally at Somoud Square in the Sahara desert village of In-Salah, south Algeria on March 5, 2015, against exploration for shale gas
Farouk Batiche, AFP

In recent months Bouteflika and his supporters have moved to take control of the security services, dissolving the powerful Department of Intelligence and Security (DRS) and jailing or sidelining top officials.

Unlike many countries in the region, including its neighbours Tunisia and Libya, Algeria has been relatively stable in recent years.

But it is facing a range of challenges, including regular jihadist attacks, sporadic outbreaks of violence between Berbers and Arabs and a precipitous drop in state revenues as oil prices have plummeted.

The reforms will also see dual nationals banned from holding high public office, a move that has angered many among the hundreds of thousands of Algerians who also have citizenship in France, the country’s former colonial power.

AFP
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