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Algeria’s Bouteflika: highlights of a long presidency

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Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, reported on Sunday to be seeking a fifth term in April elections, has had a long stint as head of the North African country.

Here are highlights:

- April 15, 1999: Backed by the army, he wins presidential elections after all six of his rivals withdraw, alleging rampant fraud.

Algeria had been battered since 1992 by a civil war prompted by the sudden cancellation of elections the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) was poised to win.

- September 16, 1999: Algerians overwhelmingly approve a referendum on Bouteflika's civil reconciliation programme which offers partial amnesty to Islamic extremists involved in the conflict, in which 200,000 people died.

Some 15,000 Islamists finally laid down their arms and a state of emergency is lifted in 2011.

- Changes constitution -

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (L) welcomes his Cuban counterpart Raul Castro to the Presidential Pa...
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (L) welcomes his Cuban counterpart Raul Castro to the Presidential Palace in Algiers in February 2009
FAYEZ NURELDINE, AFP/File

- April 9, 2009: After changing the constitution to allow himself another five years in office following two mandates, he wins a third term with 90 percent of the votes.

- January 2011: Food riots erupt amid the regional upheaval of the Arab Spring and five people are killed and more than 800 injured. It pushes Bouteflika to announce political reforms in April but the opposition says the measures are insufficient.

- April-July 2013: Bouteflika spends almost three months in hospital in Paris after suffering a mini-stroke. He will make several hospital stays in Europe in the future.

- Fourth term from wheelchair -

President Bouteflika reportedly meets with newly appointed ambassadors in this November 2014 video g...
President Bouteflika reportedly meets with newly appointed ambassadors in this November 2014 video grab from Algeria's Canal Algerie
-, CANAL ALGERIE/AFP/File

- April 17, 2014: He is elected for a fourth term with 81.5 percent of the vote, despite not campaigning and voting from a wheelchair.

His announcement in February that he would run for office was met with opposition from senior military officers and protests as his poor health stoked doubts over his ability to govern.

- January 30, 2016: He tightens his grip on power by disbanding the DRS intelligence agency, considered by many a "state within a state". Its chief, the powerful Mohamed Mediene, had been already been fired months earlier.

- Towards fifth term -

Main dates and health problems during Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's career
Main dates and health problems during Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's career
Simon MALFATTO, AFP

- February 2, 2019: The four parties in the ruling coalition give their official support to a candidacy by Bouteflika at the presidential election he has called for April 18.

- On the 10th, the official news agency APS says that Bouteflika, 81, is to seek a fifth term.

Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, reported on Sunday to be seeking a fifth term in April elections, has had a long stint as head of the North African country.

Here are highlights:

– April 15, 1999: Backed by the army, he wins presidential elections after all six of his rivals withdraw, alleging rampant fraud.

Algeria had been battered since 1992 by a civil war prompted by the sudden cancellation of elections the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) was poised to win.

– September 16, 1999: Algerians overwhelmingly approve a referendum on Bouteflika’s civil reconciliation programme which offers partial amnesty to Islamic extremists involved in the conflict, in which 200,000 people died.

Some 15,000 Islamists finally laid down their arms and a state of emergency is lifted in 2011.

– Changes constitution –

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (L) welcomes his Cuban counterpart Raul Castro to the Presidential Pa...

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika (L) welcomes his Cuban counterpart Raul Castro to the Presidential Palace in Algiers in February 2009
FAYEZ NURELDINE, AFP/File

– April 9, 2009: After changing the constitution to allow himself another five years in office following two mandates, he wins a third term with 90 percent of the votes.

– January 2011: Food riots erupt amid the regional upheaval of the Arab Spring and five people are killed and more than 800 injured. It pushes Bouteflika to announce political reforms in April but the opposition says the measures are insufficient.

– April-July 2013: Bouteflika spends almost three months in hospital in Paris after suffering a mini-stroke. He will make several hospital stays in Europe in the future.

– Fourth term from wheelchair –

President Bouteflika reportedly meets with newly appointed ambassadors in this November 2014 video g...

President Bouteflika reportedly meets with newly appointed ambassadors in this November 2014 video grab from Algeria's Canal Algerie
-, CANAL ALGERIE/AFP/File

– April 17, 2014: He is elected for a fourth term with 81.5 percent of the vote, despite not campaigning and voting from a wheelchair.

His announcement in February that he would run for office was met with opposition from senior military officers and protests as his poor health stoked doubts over his ability to govern.

– January 30, 2016: He tightens his grip on power by disbanding the DRS intelligence agency, considered by many a “state within a state”. Its chief, the powerful Mohamed Mediene, had been already been fired months earlier.

– Towards fifth term –

Main dates and health problems during Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's career

Main dates and health problems during Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's career
Simon MALFATTO, AFP

– February 2, 2019: The four parties in the ruling coalition give their official support to a candidacy by Bouteflika at the presidential election he has called for April 18.

– On the 10th, the official news agency APS says that Bouteflika, 81, is to seek a fifth term.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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