April 1990, Page 13
Special Report
Riots of 1988 Leading to Riot of Democracy in
Algeria
By Michael Collins Dunn
Until the violent riots of October 1988, Algeria's political system
was one of the most monolithic in the Arab world: a single party,
the National Liberation Front (FLN), dominated virtually every aspect
of life. The government press was stodgy; the economy a tightly
centralized socialist one. Today, only a year and a half after the
establishment was shaken by the bloodshed and the rioting of the
very people it had claimed to represent, Algeria has 20 legal political
parties and a burgeoning partisan press. If the dramatic events
in Eastern Europe had not been occurring at the same time, Algeria
might be cited as a model for democratization.
While the FLN still runs the government, it has proven to be deeply
divided, with the old guard fighting a tough rearguard action against
change. Last year, when President Chadli Benjedid sought to fire
Prime Minister Kasdi Merbah (a hardliner from the old guard), Merbah
refused for several hours to give up his post. He finally yielded
to new Premier Mouloud Hamrouche, a close ally of Chadli and a supporter
of reform.
A Shock to the Establishment
The riots of 1988 were a shock to the establishment, for the very
areas of Algiers which had been hotbeds of the revolution against
France (led by the FLN) were now seen as the centers of resistance
to the Party. Chadli promised reform, and has moved rapidly towards
an opening of the political system.
All is not perfect, however. Efforts to streamline the economic
system, while proceeding, have been slowed by bureaucratic inertia
and the resistance of the dedicated socialists in the FLN's old
guard. Chadli has opened up the political system, but if he cannot
alleviate the economic problems which caused the 1988 riots, some
wonder if he can survive. The economy is a shambles, despite Algeria
being an oil producer.
Half of all Algerians were born after independence. They do not
remember the struggle against the French and no longer venerate
the FLN as a liberation movement, knowing it only as a rusting socialist
bureaucracy. The FLN has shown itself to be a dinosaur, resistant
to change even when a strong president tries to push it in that
direction. And Chadli has not defeated his rivals in the FLN, or
silenced them as effectively as Mikhail Gorbachev seems to have
done in Moscow. Some have suggested that it might have been better
for Chadli to scrap the FLN entirely, and try to create a new presidential
party to lead Algeria into an era of political pluralism. By choosing
to stay with the FLN, Chadli may have limited his own options against
the old guard.
A Plethora of Parties
But if the FLN is unchanging, the plethora of new parties and newspapers
is something unseen before, and rare enough anywhere in the Middle
East. Parties ranging from Communist through Social Democrat to
Islamic have emerged from the shadows. Some of them are linked to
old, pre-independence movements which had broken with the FLN, or
to former political figures. Others are tiny groups representing
almost no one but their founders. But there is at least one big
exception: The Islamic Salvation Front, headed by Sheikh Abbasi
Madani, is unquestionably the FLN's biggest rival.
Prime Minister Hamrouche himself has suggested that the Islamic
Salvation Front might win some 30 percent of the vote in upcoming
municipal elections. The Party is the largest of several Islamic
groups, and claims to be the only legal Islamic political party
in the Arab world. (Muslim Brotherhood members take major roles
in the Egyptian and Jordanian parliaments, however, as independents
or members of other parties.)
Algeria's Maghreb neighbors seem a little uncertain about their
larger neighbor's pace of change. Morocco and Tunisia have far better
records of political pluralism than Algeria, but both have banned
parties based exclusively on Islam. (In Tunisia's parliamentary
elections last year, the Islamic movement Nahda, running as an independent
list, won more votes than any legal opposition party.) Algeria's
legalization of a big, influential Islamic party makes its North
African neighbors somewhat nervous. It is particularly remarkable
in view of the past Francophile, socialist, secularist nature of
Algeria's ruling FLN.
It is precisely that legacy which has encouraged the growth of
a major Islamic bloc in Algeria. The FLN's perceived failures have
encouraged those who seek a return to more traditional values. The
failure of single-party state socialism is apparent. If Chadli is
unable to transform the FLN into a party capable of competing in
genuine political pluralism, the Islamic movement may step in to
fill the void. Certainly if the FLN cannot at least alleviate the
economic and social problems which provoked the 1988 riots, there
will be further troubles.
Despite the jitters of her neighbors, Algeria's willingness to
sanction a legal Islamic party seems to have been inevitable. In
Algeria (as in Tunisia), the Islamic movement was already the strongest,
most broadly based political movement aside from the ruling party.
To try to deny this reality and bar Islamic parties would merely
have deepened Islamicist resentment of the FLN. As the experiences
of Egypt, Jordan, Yemen and even Tunisia have shown, barring parties
based on Islamic revivalist ideologies does not mean that Islamicists
do not win seats in parliament or local councils: it just means
they do so as independents or as members of other parties.
The worst upheaval since independence may actually
have been a godsend to the president.
Algeria has known only three presidents since independence. Ahmad
Ben Bella, now in exile but expected to return to lead a new party,
was a revolutionary ideologue. The late Houari Boumedienne was a
military man, but also a revolutionary adventurer who led Algeria
into the Western Sahara war. Chadli Benjedid also comes from a military
background, but he was not particularly prominent in the years of
the fight against the French. Something of a compromise candidate
when he was elected in 1979, he has proven to be a pragmatist who,
given the opportunity of the 1988 riots, is now an activist reformer.
Some observers feel that Chadli's efforts to bring about change
in the FLN had been stymied until the 1988 riots. The worst upheaval
since independence may actually have been a godsend to the president,
enabling him to use it for leverage against the old guard in the
party.
It is still a bit too soon to assess Chadli's chances of success.
The political liberalization is broad and real, but most of the
parties are not at all broad, and some are barely real. Elections
will, at first, likely be a contest between the FLN, perhaps divided
into factions, and the Islamic Salvation Front.
Michael Collins Dunn, Ph.D. is senior analyst of The International
Estimate, Inc., a Washington consultancy and Middle East editor
of its newsletter, The Estimate. |