Abdallah Djaballah: Brotherhood leader’s creeping advance in Algeria
With his contradictory
opinions, colorful stances and defamation of his country, Justice and
Development Front (FJD) leader Abdallah Djaballah has been able to lead the
Algerian political scene, but through confusion and controversy, after he tried
to jump on Algeria’s popular movement, deliberately twisting the facts to serve
the interests of his group, which is classified as terrorist in more than one
Arab region.
With his contradictory
opinions, colorful stances and defamation of his country, Justice and
Development Front (FJD) leader Abdallah Djaballah has been able to lead the
Algerian political scene, but through confusion and controversy, after he tried
to jump on Algeria’s popular movement, deliberately twisting the facts to serve
the interests of his group, which is classified as terrorist in more than one
Arab region.
Creeping advance
Saad Abdallah Djaballah
was born on May 2, 1956 in Algeria’s eastern Skikda Province. He obtained his
high school diploma and then joined the Faculty of Law at the University of
Constantine, graduating in 1978.
Djaballah crept into
politics through Islamic activism early in 1969 when he was just 15 years old,
according one of his TV interviews.
Since his political
career began, Djaballah has adopted the position of the Islamist opposition,
influenced by the ideas of Sayyid Qutb and Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna,
as well as the writings of Yusuf al-Qaradawi.
Djaballah is one of the
founders of the Brotherhood in Algeria. In 1974, he founded a secret
organization known as the Djaballah Group, which was known in 1987 as the
Islamic Group, according to the Algerian newspaper Echorouk.
According to the
newspaper, Djaballah was a founding member of the Islamic Da’wa League with Sheikh
Ahmed Sahnoun, who was the spiritual father of the Algerian Brotherhood.
Echorouk, which
deliberately exposed the Brotherhood, pointed out that Djaballah had opposed
the draft of the National Charter and rejected the socialist approach to power
in the mid-1970s, when he was arrested and interrogated for the first time,
especially since he had wanted to overthrow the regime at that time.
Djaballah was imprisoned
more than once, having been accused of incitement through his religious
sermons. He was imprisoned in 1982 and 1984, and then he was arrested again in
late 1985 with a group of Islamist group leaders.
The Brotherhood leader
ran for president twice, in 1999 and 2004. In the 2004 election, he said that
he had come in third with 4.8% of the vote. He boycotted the 1995 presidential
election.
He also boycotted the
elections on April 17, 2014, justifying this due to the absence of conditions
guaranteeing the integrity and transparency of the elections.
After the bloody events
of October 1988, Djaballah was a member of the Islamic Renaissance Association
(Ennahda) and the Association of Algerian Muslim Ulema (AOMA).
On July 30, 2011,
Djaballah announced the establishment of a new political party, which bore the
name of the Justice and Development Front. The party calls for the Islamization
of society and claims that it seeks development and opportunities for young
people, as well as real reconciliation in Algeria that contributes to the
return of political rights for all Algerians, including members of the Islamic
Salvation Front. The party participated in the last legislative elections of
2012, when it won seven seats in parliament.