Two Algeria polling stations ransacked in Berber region

Two polling stations in Algeria's unpopular
presidential election Thursday were ransacked in the disaffected Kabylie
region, home to much of the North African country's Berber ethnic minority,
residents said.
They "ransacked the ballot boxes and destroyed
part of the electoral lists" in the mountainous region's city of Bejaia,
said one witness contacted by AFP from Algiers.
Polls opened in Algeria for a delayed presidential
election that is opposed by a mass protest movement which wants the vote put
off until the entire ruling elite steps down and the military quits politics.
The military, the strongest political player, sees
the vote as the only way to restore order in Algeria, Africa's largest country,
a major natural gas supplier to Europe and home to 40 million people.
Algerian President Abdelkader Ben Saleh called on
Algerian citizens earlier in the day to participate in the elections, saying
they should freely and consciously vote for the candidate and program that
suits their beliefs in order to get the country out of the current situation.
This came a day after a large crowd of protesters
marched through central Algiers on Wednesday to demand that a presidential
election planned for Thursday be cancelled, chanting that they would not vote
in a poll they regard as a charade.
They chanted “No election tomorrow” and held up
banners reading “You have destroyed the country”.
All five of the state-approved candidates running on
Thursday are former senior officials linked to the former president Abdelaziz
Bouteflika whom the army forced aside in April in response to the protests.