Algeria: 16 Islamists Jailed for ‘Seeking Regime Change’

Ali Benhadjar, a spokesperson for the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), is among those detained..
Ali Benhadjar, a spokesperson for the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), is among those detained..
TT

Algeria: 16 Islamists Jailed for ‘Seeking Regime Change’

Ali Benhadjar, a spokesperson for the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), is among those detained..
Ali Benhadjar, a spokesperson for the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), is among those detained..

Algerian activists and lawyers said 16 members of the banned Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) have been remanded in custody after an investigating judge charged them with terrorism and attempts to overthrow the government by unconstitutional means.

Earlier this month, several FIS members were detained after they issued a statement criticizing a “political deadlock” in Algeria, which security forces said was a “threat” to the country.

The FIS members were then subject to a security investigation. The judge who questioned them ordered their detention pending investigation. At the start of the campaign, four FIS members were detained but the arrests ended with 16 members.

Ali Benhadjar, a spokesperson for the group, was among those detained. He was arrested a few hours after he appeared in a video on social media, reading a statement titled “The Frames of the Genuine Islamic Salvation Front,” in which he addressed the social situation in the country.

Benhadjar highlighted the social situation in Alegria, saying the country is experiencing “unnecessary tragedies”, blaming these on “sharp divisions caused by unlimited greed of the ruling elite, incorrect policies and destructive selfishness.”

Benhadjar also mentioned that despair has driven young people and brains to leave the country without return.

“There is a stifling political crisis and limitation on freedoms and increasing levels of poverty [and] hopelessness that have driven the country’s youth to leave the country,” his statement added.

The Algerian authorities were highly sensitive to the sudden media attention given to FIS leaders. They feared their return to political action, after the group was banned from any activity under a 2006 law.

The detained FIS members also include Ahmed Zaoui, a prominent leader who spent years in New Zealand before he returned to Algeria in 2014 and stayed in the city of Medea, south of the capital.

The Islamist FIS was on the verge of winning parliamentary elections in 1991 before the military annulled them after a coup the following year. The FIS was then banned and a five-year civil war followed.



US Links Ankara-Damascus Normalization to Political Solution in Syria

Meeting between Erdogan and Assad in 2010 (Archive)
Meeting between Erdogan and Assad in 2010 (Archive)
TT

US Links Ankara-Damascus Normalization to Political Solution in Syria

Meeting between Erdogan and Assad in 2010 (Archive)
Meeting between Erdogan and Assad in 2010 (Archive)

Recent statements by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on his willingness to meet Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to normalize relations between the two countries have sparked mixed reactions.
While the Syrian opposition sees the possibility of such a meeting despite the challenges, Damascus views the statements as a political maneuver by the Turks. Meanwhile, the United States has tied the normalization process to achieving a political solution in Syria based on UN Security Council Resolution 2254, issued in 2015.
Turkish media reported on Thursday that a US administration official, who was not named, confirmed that Washington is against normalizing relations with the Syrian regime under Assad. He emphasized that Washington cannot accept normalizing ties with Damascus without progress toward a political solution that ends the conflicts in Syria.
Meanwhile, the head of the National Coalition of Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces, Hadi al-Bahra, stated that a meeting between Assad and Erdogan is possible despite the obstacles. In a statement to Reuters on Thursday, Bahra said the meeting is feasible, even though Ankara is fully aware that the Assad regime cannot currently meet its demands and understands the regime’s limitations.
Bahra pointed out that the UN-led political process remains frozen and that he had briefed US and Western officials on the latest developments in the Syrian file. On Saturday, Bahra participated in a consultative meeting in Ankara with the Syrian Negotiation Commission, along with a high-level delegation from the US State Department, during which they exchanged views on the political solution and the need to establish binding mechanisms for implementing international resolutions related to the Syrian issue.
On the other side, Assad’s special advisor, Bouthaina Shaaban, dismissed Erdogan’s announcement that Ankara is awaiting a response from Damascus regarding his meeting with Assad for normalization as another political maneuver with ulterior motives.
Shaaban, speaking during a lecture at the Omani Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which was reported by Turkish media on Thursday, stated that any rapprochement between the two countries is contingent on its withdrawal of forces from Syrian territory.