Algeria stands at a historic crossroads
Algeria is teetering on the edge of a serious crisis. It is at a crossroads and it is hard to say which way the country will go. On the one hand, disregarding tensions such as the country has not seen since its independence in the early 1960s, the authorities are insisting on ploughing ahead with presidential elections. On the other, huge demonstrations, which for the past ten months have protested against the ruling establishment and the idea of elections under its aegis, are still taking place every week.
At the same time, the country is witnessing unprecedented legal trials of the most prominent faces of the ruling regime – including two prime ministers, ministers and business leaders – on serious charges, ranging from corruption and squandering of public funds to the abuse of power. Leading figures who until recently ruled Algeria, including the brother of ousted President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and two senior intelligence and military officers from that time, remain in prison after being convicted on serious charges of violating the authority of the army and conspiring against the government.
Against this background, which would have been unimaginable in Algeria only a few months ago, more and more people are taking to the street, rebelling against and suspicious of everything, even of the legal proceedings against these former regime henchmen. After all, the establishment, or what is left of the old regime, is still in place, even if it has offered up its most prominent figures.
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No trust in the General
The political impasse has been going on for weeks. Attempts to calm the public mood by sacrificing some of the Bouteflika faithful has only served to fuel demonstrators' demands that all such remnants of the old guard be rooted out.
According to the army commander and strongman, General Gaid Salah, who is busy trying to save the regime, all the people's demands have been met. Now it is up to the protestors to head to the ballot box in order to choose a new president.
But the protesters, whose movement is growing in leaps and bounds from week to week, regard the trials of a few regime faces as merely minor re-structuring. Moreover, they see the elections as a means of circumventing their demands – an attempt to perpetuate the old regime with more of the same.
What makes the Algerian equation seem so fraught and complicated today is the fact that both sides are clinging stubbornly to their long-held positions; there are no serious interlocutors. Those in authority who are ready to talk to the demonstrators are the very ones whom the protesters have been seeking to clear out. While, despite their movement’s rapid growth, the protesters have failed to appoint serious representatives with the credibility to negotiate in their name.
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Demanding a clean break with the old regime
The current leadership, which is an extended arm of the former regime, rejects the people's demands for a complete change of system. Not only is it opposed to the dismissal of the surviving representatives of the old system, but it is also opposed to the dismantling of institutions that represent them, and thus to the creation of transitional institutions that could replace their predecessors and pave the way for a new Algeria.
Any solution that does not result in early presidential elections is rejected by the state leadership, which sees them as the only way out of the political impasse.
The popular movement refuses to allow the old regime to continue in any way, shape or form. After all, it is accused of decades of corruption and the rigging of elections, and so to allow it to supervise any new elections would merely produce more of the same.
At a crossroads like this, there are many ways this could go, and it’s difficult to predict what will happen, even in the near term. This uncertainty is accentuated among Algerians themselves, because of the fixed positions of both the authorities and the protesters.
It will not be easy to find a way out of this situation, whilst the maintenance of the status quo is linked to a number of unpredictable factors, not least of which are the actions and counteractions of the two sides. Indeed, there has been a marked escalation over the past ten months. The regime was banking on the fact that the popular mobilisation would not last. But the passage of time has not weakened the protests, as they had hoped. In consequence, the government is now insisting on going ahead with the presidential elections, even if everyone else boycotts them.
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Entrenched positions
Meanwhile, the popular movement opposes the regime’s attempt to cling to power, although being afraid to confront it. It is seeking to maintain strong and peaceful mass action, but it is unable to produce a leadership or a mechanism that represents it in order to talk and to negotiate in its name.
As for the army, it is the only institution which still retains its power, unity and cohesion. Long considered the de facto ruler of the country, the army faces a major choice: should it stand alongside the popular movement, which may encourage the latter to augment its demands still further, or should it stand against the masses, however bad the consequences might be.
Thus, the army commander, General Gaid Salah, has been keen, since the beginning of the crisis, to dance to both tunes at the same time, showing both the carrot and the stick. Few observers think that there are any options he has not tried to respond to the demands of a movement which may end up demanding his own head.
As for the alternative, confronting the movement with force reminds Algerians of the tragic events surrounding the army's intervention in 1988, when Algerians protested against the one-party system, or as happened in 1992, when the military forcibly stopped the electoral process. This ushered in a decade of darkness, the nightmare of which many Algerians still remember.
The Algerian crisis looks set to continue, whether the election happens or not. No one is waiting around for the results, because they won’t really resolve the impasse, which worsens with every passing day.
Ali Anouzla
© Qantara.de 2019
Translated from the Arabic by Chris Somes-Charlton
Moroccan author and journalist Ali Anouzla is also the director and editor-in-chief of lakome.com. He has founded and edited several Moroccan newspapers. In 2014 he received the "Leaders for Democracy" award from the American organisation POMED (Project on Middle East Democracy).