Algeria: Thousands protest against fifth term for president



Algerians opposed to a fifth term for President Abdelaziz Bouteflika have staged rallies ranked as the largest since the 2011 Arab Spring. Largely peaceful protests in Algiers ended in scuffles with police.

Algiers saw its biggest anti-government demonstration in eight years Friday as crowds of young and old chanted "bye, bye Bouteflika" and "peaceful, peaceful."

Local broadcasting avoided live coverage, but security sources said "several tens of thousands" had taken part as police helicopters circled overhead.
Large crowds also gathered in cities such as Oran, Tizi Ouzou and Constantine in a protest organized by a movement called Mouwatana, or Citizenship, ahead of April 18 elections.
After most demonstrators had dispersed in Algiers, several hundred dissenters faced off with police near the presidential palace. Clashes resulted in several people being injured, according to foreign news agencies

Rarely seen in public

Bouteflika, who has been in office for two decades and turns 82 on Sunday, has rarely been seen in public. He suffered a stoke in 2013 and was reportedly in Switzerland on Friday undergoing medical checks.

His opponents claim he is no longer fit to lead the country and that it is being ruled by the nation's omnipresent intelligence service elite. His advisers in turn claim that he retains a firm grip on politics.
Despite a record number of would-be presidential candidates, observers say Algerians are likely to vote for him again to avoid political instability.
Picked for a fifth candidacy by his FLN party, he also has endorsement of some trade unions and business groups.

Protest 'exceptional'

Sociologist Nacer Djabi told the Associated Press that the spread of the protests, which included women, young people, secularists and Islamists, was exceptional.

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