Algeria swears in new president as opposition debates response

Since the election, the weekly Friday and Tuesday protests have gone ahead as usual [Ramzi Boudina/R

ALGIERS, Dec 20 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Abdelmadjid Tebboune has been sworn in as the president of Algeria, as the Hirak protest movement debated its response to his offer of dialogue to end a months-long political crisis.

Mounted guards in traditional red tunics, white turbans and hooded cloaks lined the way into the Palais des Nations on Thursday as Tebboune entered, Algeria’s flag fluttering overhead.

Tebboune, a former prime minister who casts himself as a reformer, was elected last week in a vote the opposition regarded as a charade intended to keep the ruling elite in power.

The army saw Thursday’s election as the best way to end 10 months of weekly mass protests that helped remove Tebboune’s predecessor, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in April, and restore a political order in which it holds sway.

The protesters refer to themselves simply as “Hirak”, or “the movement”.

Official figures showed that 40 percent of voters took part on Thursday as protests and strikes paralysed some cities and towns, with Tebboune winning 58 percent of the votes.

State media presented even that low level of turnout as vindicating the decision to hold the election, though with no outside observers monitoring the vote, many Hirak supporters regarded the figures as suspect.

Since the election, the weekly Friday and Tuesday protests have gone ahead as usual, though there were widespread reports of police arresting many demonstrators in the western city of Oran.

Among the leaderless protest movement, where debate over goals and strategy takes place on social media or during demonstrations, there were mixed reactions to the offer of dialogue and a new constitution that Tebboune made last week.

Many protesters and opposition figures have been arrested or jailed since the start of the protests in February on charges including “undermining national unity” and “weakening army morale”.

“Now that the generals have a civilian representative in the person of Abdelmadjid Tebboune, we must negotiate the transition to a rule of law with him,” said Lahouari Addi, a political science professor.

“Hirak must initiate and offer names with a list of demands,” said Lies Merabet, a labour union leader, on Facebook. — NNN-AGENCIES:

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