Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, June
1999, pages 34, 37
Special Report
Hopes for Multi-Party Election to End Algerias
Nightmare Die With April 15 One-Candidate Choice
By Faisal Kutty
With more than 50 candidates initially slated to run for the presidency,
Algeria appeared ready to give democracy a chance. But appearances
can be deceiving. In a matter of a few weeks the 50 candidatesthrough
technicalities and disqualificationdwindled to 12, to 7 and
eventually to one lone candidate. The April 15 vote, therefore,
merely confirmed the appointment of that army-backed candidate,
Abdelaziz Bouteflika, as president.
From the moment Algerias military-backed President Liamine
Zeroual called early elections last September, observers wondered
what the establishment had up its sleeve. Needless to say, they
are no longer wondering.
Shortly after Zerouals promise of a free and fair election
the military quickly pushed forward its national consensus
candidate, Abdelaziz Bouteflika. Driving home the armys
seriousness, Tahar Behbaibeche, general secretary of the National
Democratic Rally (RND), the senior partner in the ruling coalition,
was ousted for publicly stating that party members were pressured
by the generals to back Bouteflika. The leaders of five opposition
parties came forward quickly and released a statement demanding
that pressures on political parties be lifted and that the
presidents commitments on a fair poll be respected and the
army be neutral.
Few held out much hope for a free and fair contest or an end to
the carnage that has claimed between 65,000 and 100,000 lives and
resulted in the imprisonment of more than 150,000 persons. The reaction
of the international communityin particular the Westcould
have had a positive impact had they cared about the elections in
this North African cauldron of death and destruction.
Algerias 30 million people began their downward spiral into
a vicious circle of violence in 1992, following the militarys
cancellation of North Africas first experiment in multi-party
democracy. This happened after the now-outlawed Islamist party,
Front Islamique du Salut (FIS), had won the majority of 1991 municipal
election contests and, a few months later, ran up sizable pluralities
in the first stage of national elections. Rather than letting the
FIS win, the military then cancelled the second-stage runoff elections
and imposed emergency rule. The usual calls for democracy and human
rights from the West, including Algerias old colonial master,
France, were deathly muted.
Algerian blood flowed freely as the military battled Islamists
and radical and moderate Islamists battled each other. The Wests
hypocritical acquiescence and supportFrance reportedly has
provided arms, funding, intelligence and diplomatic aidfor
the hijackers of democracy has not gone unnoticed.
The military quickly pushed forward its national
consensus candidate.
As one of the candidates, Hussein Ayet Ahmed, head of the Front
des Forces Socialistes (FFS), noted recently, 37 years of
monopoly on power and of refusing freedom of choice is enough.
From the time the 1999 elections were called, the armys open
backing of Bouteflika raised concerns that the process was rigged.
But Liamine Zeroual assured the nation that the process would be
free and fair.
The subsequent open support of Bouteflika not only caused a rift
within the main coalition party, it also brought about a split in
the Islamist Al Nahda party, which in a surprising turn of events
backed the armys choice prior to the election. Al Nahdas
founder and now former leader, Abdallah Djaballah, disappointed
with the Politburos decision, set up a new party to contest
the elections until his withdrawal the day before the polls.
The largest legal Islamist party, the Movement for a Peaceful Society
(MPS), which won three million votes and garnered 69 seats in the
National Assembly in the 1995 elections, was also expected to make
strong gains. Mahfoud Nahnah, head of the MPS, and the independent
Islamist Ahmed Taleb Ibrahimi would also have been strong candidates
for the presidency if the elections had proceeded fairly. Ibrahimis
campaign coordinator was the former number three man in the FIS,
and the mosques had been actively pushing his candidacy.
Nahnah was forced to pull out from the race after being disqualified
a week before the vote by the Constitutional Council. After his
disqualification, Nahnah initially threw his support behind the
armys candidate, reportedly to get back at the other opposition
candidates who had not come to his aid at the Constitutional Council.
Ibrahimi pulled out a day before the vote with the other five candidates
to protest electoral fraud.
No Election Monitors
Human Rights Watch condemned the fact that no international election
monitors had been authorized to observe the contest and that journalists
were denied visas or restricted in their movements. State Department
spokesperson James Rubin said that the U. S. was disappointed with
the process, including the allegations of fraud.
The elections in Algeria might have represented a clear step
forward on the path to democracy and political reform, Rubin
said. We are clearly disappointed by the events of recent
days. We reiterate our view that the way for Algeria to end its
long-running crisis is through the promotion of democracy, the rule
of law and economic reform. The Algerian leadership now assumes
a heavy responsibility to pursue credible reform.
French Foreign Minister Hubert Vedrine said that We still
hope that the Algerian people could achieve their democratic ambitions
through multiplicity. A former French prime minister, Pierre
Morowa, said, We feel sorry because President Zeroual did
not cancel these elections. What happened is a severe blow to the
hope born by the Algerian election campaign.
The international community should have been more persistent in
trying to push for a free, fair and transparent process. Though
many, including Martin Indyk, the U.S. assistant secretary of state
for Near Eastern affairs, had called on the government to invite
international observers, not much was provided in terms of either
carrots or sticks to persuade the authorities to accept international
monitors.
A completely free and fair electionwith moderate elements
of FIS released from prison and allowed to participatewould
have been the best step toward national reconciliation, true democracy
and the best long-term strategy to bring an end to the vicious cycle
of violence and put Algeria on the road to some semblance of civil
society.
Such a contest would have provided an opportunity to moderate Islamists
such as Djaballah, Nahnah and Ibrahimi to prove their democratic
credentials.
For instance, Nahnah, whom I had the chance to meet personally
during his speaking engagement in Toronto last summer, advocates
shuracracy. According to Nahnah, who served as chair
of Tafsir (exegeses of the Quran) at the University of Algeria,
this catholic marriage, wherein divorce is impossible,
between shura (loosely translated as the Islamic concept
of consultative government) and democracy is the only solution that
can attack the root of the crisis between secular Westernized elites
and the growing mass of people wishing to go back to their Islamic
heritage.
The most positive turn of events would be the beginning of the
end of the senseless violence. Though both sides have been accusing
the other of carrying out the massacres, many are now rightfully
calling for an end to the finger-pointing and a focus on national
reconciliation. As Nahnah noted in Toronto, regardless of who is
behind the killing, at the end of the day Algerians are killing
Algerians and leaving behind a generation of orphans and psychologically
disturbed children. Fortunately, the violence has decreased with
the first real signs of communication between the Islamists and
the establishment.
Extremists on both sides will persist. But radicalization of the
Islamic movement can only be halted by allowing mainstream Islamists
the opportunity to present their case. Far too many Islamic movements
have developed radical splinter groups opting for the bullet after
being denied the ballot box. The best way to combat extremism is
to allow peaceful expression of competing world views. This goes
doubly for Algeria.
Faisal Kutty is a Toronto-based lawyer and free-lance writer.
He can be reached via e-mail at fkutty@law.com |