The People's National Assembly on Thursday approved a bill on a constitutional amendment, meeting one of Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune’s key electoral pledges.
Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad said that the amendment reflects the people’s desire expressed through protests that erupted in February 2019.
The amended constitution was approved by 256 of the 462 members present in the People's National Assembly, said Parliament Speaker Slimane Chenine, according to AFP.
However, it won’t become effective before being submitted to a popular referendum on Nov 1, which marks the outbreak of the Algerian War of Independence from France (1954-1962).
"The proposal is fully in line with the requirements of modern state building and responds to the demands of the popular movement (Hirak)," Tebboune said on Sunday after the government gave the reforms the green light.
The government pledged the reforms would bring a "radical change in the system of governance", prevent corruption and enshrine social justice and press freedoms in the constitution.
The revision also sets out to reinforce the "principle of separation of powers, ethics in political life and transparency in the management of public funds," so as to "spare the country any drift toward tyrannical despotism", it added.
The revised constitution has already been criticized by jurists and rejected by a group of parties and associations linked to Hirak, which has slammed it as a "laboratory constitution" and described the referendum as "treachery".