As the old ruling party wins a new parliamentary majority, we ask if change has bypassed Algeria.
Inside Story Last Modified: 14 May 2012 11:15
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Algeria's ruling National Liberation Front won almost half of the 462 seats in the Algerian parliament in Thursday's parliamentary elections.
While the National Liberation Front - which has ruled Algeria since independence from France in the early 1960s - won 220 seats, the National Democratic Rally came second with 68 seats in the National People's Assembly. The Green Alliance - which had been widely predicted to do well - secured 48 seats. That is just three-quarters of the number it won in the last elections in 2007 - bucking the trend that has seen religious parties gain power across North Africa after the 'Arab Spring'. The Green Alliance says the elections were rigged to keep it out of power in a country that has experienced decades of violence between radical groups and government security forces. But Western countries and international monitors have largely praised the vote as a step in the right direction. Hanafi Wajih, the head of the Arab League's observer mission, said: "The election was free and transparent and the Algerian people have expressed their choice without coercion."
And Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, praised the vote and, in particular, the high number of women elected as "a welcome step in Algeria's progress toward democratic reform". Prior to the elections, the government had portrayed the parliamentary contest as Algeria's 'Spring' - inviting 500 international observers and promising that the vote would be the freest in 20 years. But has the spirit of change witnessed in many parts of North Africa and the Middle East bypassed Algeria? Will the ruling party's success now make it less likely to introduce change? And has the government, as the opposition insists, missed an unprecedented opportunity for a peaceful political transition to democracy? Joining Inside Story, with presenter Stephen Cole, to discuss these issues are: Mohamed Larbi Zitout, the former Algerian deputy ambassador to Libya; Youcef Bouandel, a professor of International Affairs at Qatar University; and Malek Serrai, an international economist and former economic adviser to the Algerian president and a former regional adviser on international finance and trade for the UN.
ALGERIA ELECTION:
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Tuesday, 15 May 2012
Is Algeria immune to the 'Arab Spring'?
Labels:
Algeria,
ArabSpring,
Bouteflika,
EU,
FLN,
freedom,
Green Algeria Alliance,
Hillary Clinton,
May 10 elections,
Rachad,
Tunisia,
Zitout
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