Algeria islamists reel after election
2012-05-12 11:00
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Algeria
Berber, Arab, Islamic, and European values mix and sometimes clash as Algeria struggles for peace
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Algiers - Algeria's Islamists were reeling on
Saturday from a stinging setback in legislative polls which saw the ruling
party come out on top, resisting the Arab Spring's tide of democratic change.
The regime argued that the results showed
Algerians' desire for stability, at a time when regime change was bringing
chaos to other countries, and outright rejection of Islamism, whose rise 20
years ago led to civil war.
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's National
Liberation Front (FLN) won 220 out of 462 seats up for grabs in Thursday's
legislative elections, improving on its share in the outgoing national
assembly.
The seven Islamist parties contesting the
polls could only manage a combined 59 seats, a major setback after their
predictions of victory during the campaign.
The National Rally for Democracy (RND) of
Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia, a nationalist party close to the military and
loyal to Bouteflika, came second with 68 seats, compared to 62 in the outgoing
house.
While the results largely maintain the status
quo, one notable change was the number of elected women, which rose to 145 from
seven in the outgoing assembly following the introduction of quotas.
Algeria's outgoing governing coalition included
the FLN, the RND and the largest of the legal Islamist parties, the Movement of
Society for Peace.
Friday's provisional results, which have yet
to be confirmed by the constitutional council, mean the FLN and the RND could
form a majority without the Islamists.
"We'd already experienced Islamism,
nobody has forgotten this in Algeria... Voters were looking for security,
stability," political analyst Nourredine Hakiki said.
Green Algeria, a three-party Islamist
alliance, garnered a paltry 48 seats and charged widespread fraud.
"There has been large-scale manipulation
of the real results announced in the regions, an irrational exaggeration of
these results to favour the administration parties," it said in a
statement.
It warned it would take measures in protest.
In the wake of the popular revolts that
became known as the Arab Spring, moderate Islamist parties recorded electoral
victories in Tunisia, Egypt and Morocco.
Ouyahia argued that the Arab Spring was
hardly an attractive scenario, calling it a "plague" that had
resulted in "the colonisation of Iraq, the destruction of Libya, the
partition of Sudan and the weakening of Egypt".
Turnout had been expected to be low after a
campaign that produced no new faces and failed to draw crowds.
But Interior Minister Daho Ould Kablia
announced a "remarkable" rate of 42.36% which he said confirmed
Algeria's democratic credentials.
Many Algerians and observers had predicted
that ever deeper mistrust, especially among the country's majority of young
people, could lead to an even worse turnout than the historical low of 35%
recorded in 2007.
The opposition Rally for Culture and
Democracy, which chose to boycott this election, claimed the announced turnout
was fraudulent and that the real figure "did not exceed 18 percent."
The Socialist Forces Front, Algeria's oldest
opposition party, garnered only 21 seats and also cried foul, charged the
regime has used the election "only to consolidate its power".
Some 500 foreign observers brought in by
Bouteflika to monitor the vote reported only minor hiccups but they were denied
access to the national electoral roll, which grew by four million voters since
2007.
Dozens of complaints were filed to the
electoral commission however and observers were expected to release more
detailed assessments on Saturday and Sunday.
- SAPA