Voters skeptical of change in Algeria elections
Topics: From the Wires, News
Abdelaziz Belkhadem, head of Algeria's most powerful political party, the National Liberation Front, is back-dropped by a large national flag as he addresses supporters at a rally in Algiers, Sunday May 6, 2012, on the final day of campaigning ahead of Algeria's elections. Algerians are gearing up for legislative elections on upcoming Thursday and the government is urging people to vote to avoid the low turnouts of past contests. (AP Photo/Paul Schemm)(Credit: AP)ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — In the gritty, working class Algiers suburb of Harrache, activists sporting the green baseball caps of the Islamist “Green” alliance hand out election leaflets outside their party headquarters, urging people to vote.
A middle-aged man pushed past the young activists. “The last people I voted for were thrown into jail,” he said in disgust. “I’m done with that.”
Algeria is gearing up for parliamentary elections on Thursday that promise to be the freest ever. But the legacy of the 1991 elections nearly won by Islamists before a military coup ended the voting hangs heavy: Memories still fester of how Islamist candidates were thrown into prison and the nation plunged into more than a decade of civil war.
Once again, Islamists will square off against pro-government parties. But after decades of repression and rigged contests, turnout may not surpass the anemic 35 percent seen in the last elections in 2007.
The Arab Spring pro-democracy uprisings that engulfed the region have largely bypassed Algeria, the African continent’s largest country and an OPEC member rich from its natural gas fields. But while the nation’s wealth has helped stave off unrest, faith in the political process appears broken.
“All the parties are the same, filled with scammers and the corrupt,” said Hamid Bouchna, an unemployed university graduate with a degree in electrical engineering.
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is promising reforms and free elections with international observers to placate a restive population. But the three weeks of election campaigning that ended Sunday were characterized by low turnouts at rallies, defaced election posters and a populace that seems immune to government promises that this time will be different.
“Elections in Algeria do not have a good reputation. People say I vote, but nothing changes — it’s the same people we always see, the same parties,” said sociologist Nasser Djabi, noting that the legislature is largely powerless in the face of an autocratic president.
On Thursday, 21.6 million Algerians will vote for 44 parties, half of which were just legalized this year, for a parliament that Bouteflika promises will have a say in rewriting the constitution.
Yet the elections are expected to produce a fractured legislature divided between government parties, the Islamist alliance and a smattering of smaller groups.




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