TANZIA Former President of Algeria Abdelaziz Bouteflika is dead

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(Algiers) Former Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika died on Friday at the age of 84, state television reported.

Posted on September 17, 2021 at
7:07 p.m. Quebec, Canada

FRANCE MEDIA AGENCY
"Death of former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika", indicated a banner unfolding on national television, which quotes a press release from the Presidency of the Republic. Since his spectacular fall in April 2019 under pressure from the army and the street, Mr. Bouteflika had remained holed up in solitude in his nursing home in Zeralda, west of Algiers. His downfall had become inevitable after weeks of massive protests against his desire to run for a fifth five-year term. Source: Algérie | L’ex-président Abdelaziz Bouteflika est mort

 

Abdelaziz Bouteflika ni nani?​

Bouteflika aliingia madarakani mwaka 1999 na kusifiwa kwa kutokomeza vita ya wenyewe kwa wenyewe ambayo ilikadiriwa kuuwa watu zaidi ya 100,000.
Waandamanaji dhidi ya ongezeko la gharama ya chakula na ukosefu wa ajira mwaka 2011 wakati wa utawala wa kiarabu , rais huyo aliweza kutatua tatizo hilo kwa haraka.
Mara baada ya kupooza , aliweza kushinda tena uchaguzi licha ya kuwa na upinzani mkali kutoka kwa vyama vya upinzani kwa kudaiwa kuwa afya yake itamfanya ashindwe kutimiza majukumu yake.
Pamoja na ukosoaji huo bwana Bouteflika bado ana nafasi kubwa ya kushinda mwaka huu.
Upinzani nchini Algeria umegawanyika na Bouteflika alishinda uchaguzi wa awali wa urais wa mwaka 2014 pamoja na kutofanya kampeni mwenyewe.


The civil war began after an era of unprecedented openness in the late 1980s. Personal freedoms blossomed and dozens of new political parties were created. But when Islamist parties appeared ready to sweep to victory in the early 90s, the government canceled legislative elections.

People lived for eight years not knowing if they would even return home when they left the house in the morning. People saw babies massacred and whole village wiped out. Today there are cases of schizophrenia relating to those years. It was horrible, and after a while, no one knew who was killing who anymore.
Algerian journalist Rachid Khiari
The Islamists fought back, initially targeted the army and police — but then they began attacking civilians; artists, teachers, judges and journalists were slain. State security forces, trying to root out the insurgency, often killed indiscriminately. By the end of the 1990s, an estimated 200,000 Algerians had died.

Members of the Algerian Association of the Disappeared have been protesting once a week since 1998. They say they simply want information about the more than 8,000 Algerians who went missing during the Black Decade.

Nassera Dutour, who is president of the association, says she doesn't bother wearing makeup since her son Amin was kidnapped some 13 years ago. She calls her frequent laugh a nervous habit.

"The military and police would come together," she says, describing how people like her son disappeared in the 1990s. "They'd circle a village looking for so-called 'terrorists.' It was like the gestapo. They'd knock at the door, lock up the women and take the men. And if they couldn't find who they were looking for, they'd take other family members."

The government eventually put down the insurgency. In 2005, under Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, Algerians approved a charter for national reconciliation.

It gave amnesty to Islamists who handed in their weapons, and families were monetarily compensated for members who had disappeared.

Dutour says she and the other mothers also want information about their children, but since the amnesty, the government considers the issue of the missing closed and refuses to meet with them.

Almost every Algerian was touched by the killings of the 1990s.

Dr. Amel Abbas is seeing patients at one of the main hospitals in the capital of Algiers. She says the violence of the 1990s still profoundly affects Algerians.

During the Black Decade, people just tried to stay alive and prayed that the killing would stop. That's why they don't take to the streets in protest now.

"People want to live peacefully and normally now," she says. "And we want to become more prosperous, too. I think once we've done that, we'll think more about democracy."

Abbas and other Algerians say they want change to come, but they want to take their time and make sure it comes peacefully.
 
I
Innalillah wainnailaih rajiun
 
Dictator mstaafu huyu,angekuwa madarakani kipindi cha Jiwe Kayafa lazima angefanya ziara Algeria.
 
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