Algerian Judiciary Investigates Properties of Gaid Salah’s Family

File photo: Ahmed Gaïd Salah. AP
File photo: Ahmed Gaïd Salah. AP
TT

Algerian Judiciary Investigates Properties of Gaid Salah’s Family

File photo: Ahmed Gaïd Salah. AP
File photo: Ahmed Gaïd Salah. AP

Algeria’s security services have launched a thorough investigation into properties and investments made by the family of late Ahmed Gaid Salah, the powerful Algerian general and army chief.

Salah died on Dec. 23 last year. He was the country's deputy minister of defense and had supported protesters who called for the resignation of president Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

A report published Thursday by Al Watan newspaper said that the Dar El Beida Tribunal in Algiers banned the two sons of Gaid Salah, Adel and Boumediene, from travelling abroad.

It said both men are now subject to a judicial inquiry into the properties and companies, which Gaid Salah’s family owned when the Algerian army chief was in power.

A judicial source said that the prosecution placed a number of Gaid Salah family members and other figures and businessmen on the list of persons banned from travelling on suspicion of corruption.

The same source said that a decision was taken to launch investigations with Gaid Salah’s two sons after their names came up during the interrogation of Guermit Bounouira, a former private secretary to Gaid Salah, who fled Algeria on March 5 to seek asylum in exchange for highly sensitive information and documents.

Bounouira was handed over by Turkey to the Algerian authorities last month. He is in detention in the military prison of Blida on charges of high treason.

The newspaper said that investigations with Gaid Salah’s family revolve around their properties in the eastern town of Annaba.

The family also owns a number of buildings and a newspaper, Edough News, run by Adel Gaid Salah.



Türkiye Continues Strikes on PKK in Iraq, Syria Despite Ocalan Call 

Syrian Kurds hold flags as they gather after Türkiye’s jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan called on his Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to lay down its arms, in Hasakah, Syria February 27, 2025. (Reuters)
Syrian Kurds hold flags as they gather after Türkiye’s jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan called on his Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to lay down its arms, in Hasakah, Syria February 27, 2025. (Reuters)
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Türkiye Continues Strikes on PKK in Iraq, Syria Despite Ocalan Call 

Syrian Kurds hold flags as they gather after Türkiye’s jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan called on his Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to lay down its arms, in Hasakah, Syria February 27, 2025. (Reuters)
Syrian Kurds hold flags as they gather after Türkiye’s jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan called on his Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) to lay down its arms, in Hasakah, Syria February 27, 2025. (Reuters)

Türkiye’s armed forces have killed 26 Kurdish militants in Iraq and Syria in the week after jailed militant leader Abdullah Ocalan's disarmament call, the defense ministry said on Thursday.

Ocalan last week called on his outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) to lay down its arms and dissolve, and the militant group declared an immediate ceasefire on Saturday.

"The Turkish Armed Forces will continue its operations and search-scanning activities in the region for the survival and security of our country," the defense ministry spokesperson told a weekly press briefing.

"(It) will continue its fight against terrorism with determination and resolve until there is not a single terrorist left," the spokesperson added.

The spokesperson Zeki Akturk said the PKK militants had been "neutralized" in Iraq and Syria, without specifying where the incidents took place. The ministry's use of the term "neutralized" commonly means killed.

The PKK, designated a terrorist group by Türkiye and its Western allies, said it was ready to convene a congress, as Ocalan urged, but the necessary security conditions should be established for him to "personally direct and run" it.

The Syrian Kurdish YPG, the spearhead of the key US ally against ISIS in Syria that Ankara views as an extension of the PKK, has said Ocalan's message did not apply to them.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday Türkiye would continue operations against the PKK if the group's process of disarmament is stalled or promises are not kept.

Erdogan's ruling AK Party spokesman Omer Celik said all Kurdish militants in Iraq and Syria, including the US-allied Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), must lay down their weapons.