Algerian youth eye Tebboune’s reelection bid with hope and skepticism

People walk past an electoral banner of President Abdelmajid Tebboune in the center of Algiers. About 24 million Algerians are poised to head to the polls on Saturday. (AFP)
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People walk past an electoral banner of President Abdelmajid Tebboune in the center of Algiers. About 24 million Algerians are poised to head to the polls on Saturday. (AFP)
Algerian youth eye Tebboune’s  reelection bid with hope and skepticism
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Supporters of President of Algeria’s Islamist Movement for the Society and Peace (MSP) and presidential candidate Abdelaali Hassani Cherif, attend his electoral campaign in Algiers on Sept. 3, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 06 September 2024
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Algerian youth eye Tebboune’s reelection bid with hope and skepticism

Algerian youth eye Tebboune’s  reelection bid with hope and skepticism
  • The president has pledged to create 450,000 jobs and increase monthly unemployment benefits

ALGIERS: Young people comprise more than half of Algeria’s 45 million people, and many are anxious for change. But with incumbent President Abelmadjid Tebboune set for an easy reelection on Saturday, some fear it won’t be forthcoming.

Courting the youth vote, Tebboune has promised more jobs, a higher minimum wage, and better unemployment benefits.
This reflects high unemployment in Algeria, where one in three young people is out of work.
Tebboune came to power after the youth-driven Hirak pro-democracy protests ousted his veteran predecessor Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in 2019.
But the movement waned, and many of its supporters have become disenchanted.

BACKGROUND

Today, Algeria stands as Africa’s top gas exporter and third-largest economy, with President Abelmadjid saying his tenure helped achieve that despite ‘a war against COVID-19 and corruption.’

“The past five years brought nothing new,” Abdenour Benkherouf, a 20-year-old hairdresser wandering with a friend in downtown Algiers, said.
“We haven’t seen anything good since 2019, since we won the African Cup,” he smirked.
Karim Beldjoudi, his friend who was wearing a Barcelona football shirt, agreed.
“We’re living now as we lived then,” he said, referring to 2019, the year Tebboune was elected in a widely boycotted poll.
“Five years have gone by just like that, one after the other,” said Beldjoudi, who is unemployed.
Today, about a third of Algeria’s 24 million registered voters are under 30. However, as in 2019, when a record 60 percent of voters abstained, the majority will likely still not vote.
No official figures show the abstention rate among the young in Algeria, where 23 million people are younger than 30.
This constitutes a challenge for Tebboune, who claimed the presidency amid a record abstention rate of 60 percent five years ago.
At a recent rally in Oran last month, he pledged to create 450,000 jobs and increase monthly unemployment benefits if reelected.
Launched in 2022, unemployment benefits now provide 13,000 dinars ($97) to people aged 19 to 40. Tebboune has promised to raise this to 20,000 dinars, which would match the current minimum wage.
Fouad Brahimi, a 22-year-old artist, said this wouldn’t be enough.
“We need job opportunities because this allowance is not sustainable,” he said.
Although Algeria’s economy has grown at an annualized rate of about 4 percent over the past two years, it remains heavily dependent on oil and gas to fund its social assistance programs.
“Tebboune has indeed put in work, but he is also perpetuating a project left by his predecessors,” Brahimi added.
Tebboune had referred to Bouteflika’s rule as a “decade of the mafia” when wealth was concentrated in the hands of a “gang.”
Today, Algeria stands as Africa’s top gas exporter and third-largest economy, with Tebboune saying his tenure helped achieve that despite “a war against COVID-19 and corruption.”
Standing by an election poster of Tebboune, 21-year-old Chadli Isshak said that because of the pandemic, the president “wasn’t able to fulfill all his promises.”
“He did create jobs and is reducing Algeria’s debt,” said the student.
“But two or three years have not been enough for him to do everything he wanted,” he added.
“We will see in his second term if he can keep his promises.”
Sami Rahmani, 39, said he was satisfied with the president’s record despite being unemployed.
“He has worked hard, and I would like to see him do more in the upcoming five years,” he said.
“He should look into helping the marginalized youth. We have people with diplomas but no jobs.”
Each year, thousands of graduates resign themselves to jobs that do not match their degrees, working in precarious and, at times, informal jobs such as street vending.
Rahmani said his support for Tebboune had made him a “traitor to the Hirak” in the eyes of others.
The movement withered with the onset of the pandemic, coupled with ramped-up policing and a sweeping crackdown on protesters in which hundreds were arrested.
Faced with disillusionment, many young Algerians have left the country, formally, through student and other visas or via makeshift boats in the hope of crossing the Mediterranean to Europe.
Benkherouf and Beldjoudi, the friends interviewed by AFP in the city center, said most people their age “now have the same dream: harga,” referring to irregular migration.

 


Jordan’s prime minister warns against threat of ‘political opportunism’ and external loyalties

Jordan’s prime minister warns against threat of ‘political opportunism’ and external loyalties
Updated 11 sec ago
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Jordan’s prime minister warns against threat of ‘political opportunism’ and external loyalties

Jordan’s prime minister warns against threat of ‘political opportunism’ and external loyalties
  • Jafar Hassan’s comments follow arrest of 16 people accused of planning acts of chaos and sabotage, and seizures of missiles, explosives and firearms
  • ‘Nothing transcends Jordan’s interests’ and there is no tolerance for ‘subversive elements seeking to propagate instability and impede national progress,’ he says

LONDON: Jordan’s Prime Minister Jafar Hassan cautioned on Tuesday against acts of “political opportunism” and any activities that might undermine public safety.

Speaking during a Cabinet meeting in Ajloun, he said: “The Jordanian state’s forbearance cannot be subjected to testing, nor can any entity prevail against it through performative displays or populist demagoguery, or jeopardize public welfare for any cause whatsoever,” the Jordan News Agency reported.

“Nothing transcends Jordan’s interests” and there is “no space for external loyalties or subversive elements seeking to propagate instability and impede national progress,” he added.

“Within Jordan’s borders, sovereignty is exclusively vested in constitutional legitimacy, with authority concentrated solely in state institutions and our independent judiciary.”

The prime minister’s comments came a week after Jordanian authorities said they foiled a series of plots that threatened the country’s national security. They arrested 16 people accused of planning acts of chaos and sabotage, and seized weapons including missiles, explosives and firearms.

Hassan said national unity is essential to the country’s strength and any attempt to compromise it “constitutes direct opposition to Jordan’s national interests and its citizenry.”


Syria arrests Assad-era officer accused of ‘war crimes’: ministry

Interior ministry announced that security forces had arrested the “criminal brigadier-general Sultan Al-Tinawi.”
Interior ministry announced that security forces had arrested the “criminal brigadier-general Sultan Al-Tinawi.”
Updated 41 sec ago
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Syria arrests Assad-era officer accused of ‘war crimes’: ministry

Interior ministry announced that security forces had arrested the “criminal brigadier-general Sultan Al-Tinawi.”
  • The statement accused Tinawi of involvement in “committing war crimes against civilians, including a massacre” in the Damascus countryside in 2016

DAMASCUS: Syrian authorities said Tuesday they had arrested a former officer in the feared security apparatus of ousted ruler Bashar Assad, the latest such announcement as the new government pursues ex-officials accused of atrocities.
The interior ministry announced in a statement that security forces in the coastal province of Latakia had arrested the “criminal brigadier-general Sultan Al-Tinawi,” saying he was a key officer in the air force intelligence, one of the Assad family’s most trusted security agencies.
The statement accused Tinawi of involvement in “committing war crimes against civilians, including a massacre” in the Damascus countryside in 2016.
It said he was responsible for “coordinating between the leadership of the Lebanese Hezbollah militia and a number of sectarian groups in Syria.”
Tinawi has been referred to the public prosecution for further investigation, the statement said.
A security source, requesting anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media, said that Tinawi held senior administrative positions in the air force intelligence when Jamil Hassan was head of the notorious agency.
Hassan has been sentenced in absentia in France for complicity in crimes against humanity and war crimes, while the United States has accused him of “war crimes,” including overseeing barrel bomb attacks on Syrian people that killed thousands of civilians.
Tinawi had been “head of the information branch of the air force intelligence” before Assad’s ouster late last year, the security source told AFP, describing the branch as “one of the most powerful and secret security agencies in the country.”
Since taking power in December, Syria’s new authorities have announced a number of arrests of Assad-era security officials.
Assad fled to Moscow with only a handful of confidants, abandoning senior officials and security officers, some of whom have reportedly fled to neighboring countries or taken refuge in the coastal heartland of Assad’s Alawite minority community.


Jerusalem patriarch hails pope’s commitment to Gaza

Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, gives a press conference at the patriarchate headquarters.
Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, gives a press conference at the patriarchate headquarters.
Updated 59 min 18 sec ago
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Jerusalem patriarch hails pope’s commitment to Gaza

Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, gives a press conference at the patriarchate headquarters.
  • Patriarch thanked numerous Palestinian and Israeli public figures who offered condolences, did not comment on lack of any official message from Netanyahu

JERUSALEM: The Latin patriarch of Jerusalem, Archbishop Pierbattista Pizzaballa, on Tuesday hailed Pope Francis’s support for Gazans and engagement with the small Catholic community in the war-battered Palestinian territory.
The Catholic church’s highest authority in the region, who is considered a potential successor to the late pontiff, Pizzaballa told journalists in Jerusalem that “Gaza represents, a little bit, all what was the heart of his pontificate.”
Pope Francis, who died on Monday aged 88, advocated peace and “closeness to the poor... and to the neglected one,” said the patriarch.
These positions became particularly evident in Francis’s response to the Israel-Hamas war which broke out in October 2023, Pizzaballa said.
“He was very close to the community of Gaza, the parish of Gaza, he kept calling them many times — for a certain period, also every day, every evening at 7 pm,” said the patriarch.
He added that by doing so, the pope “became for the community something stable, and also comforting for them, and he knew this.”
Out of the Gaza Strip’s 2.4 million people, about 1,000 are Christians. Most of them are Orthodox, but according to the Latin Patriarchate, there are about 135 Catholics in the territory.
Since the early days of the war, members of the Catholic community have been sheltering at Holy Family Church compound in Gaza City, and some Orthodox Christians have also found refuge there.
Pope Francis repeatedly called for an end to the war. The day before his death, in a final Easter message delivered on Sunday, he condemned the “deplorable humanitarian situation” in the besieged territory.
“Work for justice... but without becoming part of the conflict,” said Pizzaballa of the late pontiff’s actions.
“For us, for the Church, it leaves an important legacy.”
The patriarch thanked the numerous Palestinian and Israeli public figures who have offered their condolences, preferring not to comment on the lack of any official message from Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Even as “the local authorities... were not always happy” with the pope’s positions or statements, they were “always very respectful,” he said.
Pizzaballa said he will travel to Rome on Wednesday, after leading a requiem mass for the pope at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem in the morning.
As one of the 135 cardinal electors, the Latin patriarch will participate in the conclave to elect a new pope.
Pizzaballa, a 60-year-old Italian Franciscan who also speaks English and Hebrew, arrived in Jerusalem in 1990 and was made a cardinal in September 2023, just before the Gaza war began.
His visits to Gaza and appeals for peace since then have attracted international attention.


UAE FM meets Sri Lankan president in Colombo visit

UAE FM meets Sri Lankan president in Colombo visit
Updated 22 April 2025
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UAE FM meets Sri Lankan president in Colombo visit

UAE FM meets Sri Lankan president in Colombo visit
  • Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan highlighted the UAE’s commitment to enhancing cooperation with Sri Lanka
  • He attended the signing of a deal to establish the UAE-Sri Lanka Joint Business Council

LONDON: Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, the UAE minister of foreign affairs, met Sri Lanka’s president and foreign minister in Colombo during an official visit on Tuesday.

Sheikh Abdullah and President Anura Kumara Dissanayake discussed ways to enhance bilateral cooperation in various sectors, building on strong and evolving ties between the UAE and Sri Lanka.

He highlighted the UAE’s commitment to enhancing cooperation with Sri Lanka to support the development goals of both countries, the Emirates News Agency reported.

The UAE is committed to partnering with friendly countries to enhance prosperity and sustainable development, he added. President Dissanayake commended the strong relationship between Abu Dhabi and Colombo, WAM reported.

Sheikh Abdullah spoke with his Sri Lankan counterpart, Vijitha Herath, about opportunities for enhancing cooperation in areas such as the economy, trade, tourism and development.

The ministers exchanged views on several regional and international issues, and attended the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the Federation of UAE Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the National Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka.

The memorandum, signed on Tuesday by Saeed Mubarak Al-Hajeri, the Emirati assistant minister for economic and trade affairs, and Lakmal Fernando, vice president of the National Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka, aims to establish the UAE-Sri Lanka Joint Business Council.

Khaled Nasser Al-Ameri, the UAE’s ambassador to Sri Lanka, attended the meetings along with senior Emirati officials.


South Sudan opposition says under fresh govt military attack

South Sudan opposition says under fresh govt military attack
Updated 22 April 2025
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South Sudan opposition says under fresh govt military attack

South Sudan opposition says under fresh govt military attack
  • “The South Sudan People’s Defense Forces has attacked Panyume cantonment site,” Gabriel said
  • “Clashes are still ongoing and details will follow later“

JUBA: South Sudan’s opposition accused government forces of attacking one of its military positions in Central Equatoria State on Tuesday as their fragile power-sharing agreement continues to unravel.
Central Equatoria State, which includes the capital Juba, was split into areas controlled by government and opposition forces under a 2018 power-sharing deal that ended South Sudan’s five-year civil war, in which an estimated 400,000 people died.
The agreement brought President Salva Kiir and his long-time rival, Vice President Riek Machar, together in a unity government.
But the deal has been unraveling in recent months as Kiir moves to sideline Machar, who was placed under house arrest last month.
“The SSPDF (South Sudan People’s Defense Forces) has attacked Panyume cantonment site from multiple directions this morning,” opposition party spokesman Lam Paul Gabriel said on Facebook.
“Clashes are still ongoing and details will follow later,” he added.
Facing sustained attacks on its positions, the opposition forces commander directed his troops to prepare for conflict, according to another statement by Gabriel on Tuesday.
“Lt. Gen. Peter Thok Chuol hereby directs all sectors, divisions and all units of the SPLA-IO (Sudan People’s Liberation Army in Opposition) to be vigilant and promptly defend themselves and the civilians under their control areas,” he said.