Bouteflika announces postponement the Presidential Election

President of the Republic Abdelaziz Bouteflika sent
Monday a message to the nation in which he announced the postponement of the
Presidential Elections of 18 April 2019, and his decision to renounce his bid
to seek a 5th term as president.
Bouteflika also announced the holding of the
Presidential Election a an extension of the National Inclusive and Independent
Conference as well as the formation of a government of the national
competences.
He made the surprise announcement on Monday in a
letter to the Algerian people released by his office. The 82-year-old leader,
who has been in power for two decades, acknowledged three consecutive weeks of
demonstrations against his rule in which hundreds of thousands of people from
across Algerian society took to the streets.
“I understand the motivations of the many people who
chose this method of expression,” Bouteflika said in the letter, praising the
peaceful nature of the protests before promising sweeping constitutional and
political changes.
“This new system and new republic will be in the
hands of a new generation of Algerians,” he said, promising a national
conference lasting until the end of this year to find his successor.
Video posted online showed stunned citizens in
Algiers’ central Audin Square waving their arms with joy to a chorus of
celebratory car horns.
“It is great news! I’m both happy and confused
because there’s still so much more that needs to happen,” said Nourhane Atmani,
a student who took part in the protests. “Refusing Bouteflika’s fifth bid was
just a step. The people need to unite to choose what’s next.”
As Bouteflika made his announcement, the prime
minister, Ahmed Ouyahia, resigned and was replaced by Noureddine Bedoui,
previously the interior minister, Ennahar TV reported on Monday. Ramtane
Lamamra, who was Bouteflika’s diplomatic adviser, was appointed deputy prime
minister, it said.
Bouteflika arrived back in Algeria late on Sunday
night after two weeks of medical treatment in Geneva, returning to a country
beset by protests and a general strike. Last Friday hundreds of thousands of
people took to the streets, marking the third week of demonstrations against
his rule.
What began as protests against his bid for a fifth
term as president quickly expanded into opposition to the entire regime around
the infirm leader, and some young demonstrators said on Monday they were not
entirely satisfied with Bouteflika’s proposal.
“It’s one small battle won,” said Yasmine Bouchene,
of the collective Les Jeunes Engagés (Activist Youth). “Bouteflika asked for
another year and he got his way. But we are willing to keep on fighting,” she
said.
There is widespread resentment at the perceived
incompetence and corruption of the Front de Libération Nationale (FLN), the
party that has been in power for more than 50 years. Several FLN
parliamentarians resigned on Friday to join the protest movement.
Bouteflika had previously warned protesters of the
risk of infiltration by “misleading parties” leading to chaos not seen since
the civil war. He had offered to hold another election to choose his successor
if re-elected in April.
But in the letter on Monday night, Bouteflika
cancelled the 18 April vote. He said this would calm tensions, allow the
country to move forward along a path of “serene, calm and public security”, and
let Algerian institutions “prepare as quickly as possible for the advent of a
new era in Algeria”.
Bouteflika said the government would organise a
national conference under the direction of an independent presidential
commission. “This will independently decide the date of the presidential
election, in which I will not be a candidate in any instance,” he said.
The conference will be accompanied by a national
referendum to rewrite the constitution. In the meantime, Algeria will be
governed by an interim government to oversee the country’s day-to-day institutional
function.
Raouf Farrah, of Les Jeunes Engagés and Ibtykar, an
organisation to promote civil engagement, said: “For me, this is not a victory.
Delaying the elections doesn’t mean they’re cancelled; it’s a tactic to
maintain the status quo, at least temporarily.”
Farrah did not trust the outgoing president’s
promises. “Bouteflika can still remain in power until the end of the so-called
national conference, with no guarantees or a timetable. He wants to steal
victory from the people by claiming to be the saviour of Algeria,” he said.
Mustapha Bouchachi, a human rights lawyer, described
the announcement as a “half victory.”
France’s foreign minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian,
praised Bouteflika’s declaration and said France was “hopeful that a new
momentum to reward the highest aspirations of the Algerian people will quickly
emerge”.
A five-day general strike began on Sunday as shops
across the country were closed and groups of workers gathered in the streets
brandishing flags and signs objecting to Bouteflika’s attempt to serve a fifth
term in office.
Despite the government’s efforts to contain the
protests, some workers in the energy sector, which accounts for an estimated
30% of the country’s GDP, joined the strike on Sunday, the first day of the
working week in Algeria.
Social media posts implored citizens to enact civil
disobedience and refuse to attend their jobs for the rest of the working week.
It was unclear on Monday evening whether the strike
would continue, but some protesters pledged to maintain pressure on the
government by demonstrating again on Friday this week.
“The people have been asking to bring down the whole
system – this is a small victory compared to what people are asking for,” said
Tin Hinane el-Kadi, a member of the protest movement Mouwatana.
“When you think about it, what Bouteflika wrote is
basically something we rejected before,” she said. “He’s illegally extending a
fourth term and staying until the end of the year, and we don’t want that.
We’re asking for democracy, a state of law and a change of regime – we want the
current to go, so this is clearly not enough. People will still be protesting
on Friday,” she said.