Algeria holds first Parliament election since protest wave in 2019. But many stayed away.
One young woman only recently decided voting was the best way to change Algeria. An older man scoffed at the idea of casting a ballot, describing the government as corrupt and the people as "suffocated."
The divergent opinions were on
full display Saturday during the first legislative election in Algeria since
protests in 2019 prompted the resignation of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika,
who tried to secure a fifth term, despite having been largely absent from
public life since suffering a stroke in 2013.
Now, Algerians who once marched
alongside one another two years ago have become divided over where the North
African country should go from here.
Some see the vote as a way to keep
political action alive and change state institutions from within. Others
boycotted, calling the election nothing more than a masquerade that will do
nothing to change Algeria’s old guard and address serious economic difficulties
from declining energy revenue.
And still others are too
disenchanted to cast a ballot — lamenting the lack of change since the Hirak,
or the Movement, that toppled Bouteflika after 20 years in power.
“There’s an indifference,” said one Algerian
analyst who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of
the political situation. “Algerians don’t believe too much in this election.
. . . [They see] the Parliament as useless.”
Official preliminary results are
expected Sunday. Many seats are expected to go to independent candidates, but
the boycott could open more room for Islamists.
Photos circulating on social media
purported to show the aftermath of clashes between protesters and police in the
Kabylie region east of the capital, Algiers, where many opposed the vote. In
one image, piles of ballots appeared to be scattered across a road.
The vote follows President
Abdelmadjid Tebboune’s decision to dissolve the lower house of Parliament
earlier this year.
The 75-year-old Tebboune — who
briefly served as a prime minister under Bouteflika — came to power in 2019 in
elections widely criticized by many who participated in the Hirak protests. His
critics see him as a member of the same old guard the protest movement hoped to
oust. Demonstrations continued after his election, though the pandemic
disrupted them for about a year.
Protesters returned to the streets
again in February, but authorities have waged with large-scale arrests in
recent weeks. Several prominent activists and journalists were among those
arrested this past week in what Amnesty International described as “a chilling
escalation in the Algerian authorities’ clampdown on the rights to freedom of
expression and association.”
On Friday, dozens of police
vehicles were installed along a nearly deserted Rue Didouche Mourad — the
normal gathering place for protests in Algiers.
“The last three Fridays, I’ve been too scared to
leave home,” said Sabah, 48, who previously participated in the protests
regularly and spoke on the condition she be identified by only her first name.
She said she did not plan to vote Saturday, citing her distrust in the current
government.
Despite some changes brought forth
by the 2019 protests, “it’s still the same old song,” she said.
“There are arbitrary arrests, and they speak to
us of democracy,” she said. “We are disillusioned. We no longer know who to
believe and who not to believe.”
Voter turnout is expected to be
low in the capital but higher in rural areas. About 40 percent of eligible
voters participated in the 2019 presidential election, and fewer than 25
percent voted in a constitutional referendum last year.
But Tebboune told reporters
Saturday that “the participation rate is not important to me.”
“What’s important is that the people who will be
elected will have sufficient legitimacy,” he said.
Mohamed Charfi, head of the
country’s independent electoral authority, said in an interview that he
understands there was a long-held sense of distrust in earlier elections. But,
he added, his office faces the challenge to “convince people that the act of
voting is not in vain.”
Meriem Saidani, who participated
in the protests in 2019 and is now running for a seat with the New Generation
Party, said not participating in Saturday’s election leaves space for the
return of “the old political class, those who contributed to the ruin of the
Algerian political system. . . . We would have had a revolution for nothing.”
Members of Saidani’s party are
among those who believe that, after inspiring millions, Hirak has been weakened
by an unwillingness to translate its demands into the country’s existing
political system.
But others still see the movement
as most powerful without designated leaders — a design, they say, that allows
diverse voices.
The government described the
elections in a slogan as “the dawn of change.” Still, many in the capital
bristle at the idea that the country’s existing institutions can implement
lasting changes.
Walid, a university student,
described Hirak as “the first time we could be against the system without being
imprisoned.”
But he had no plans to participate
in the elections.
“It’s only old people who vote,” he said, speaking on the condition that only his first name be used because of political tensions. Algeria “is theoretically a democracy,” he added. “But not really.”