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Algeria hid massacre toll
22/03/2006 23:00  - (SA)  

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  • Algiers - Algeria's government has acknowledged hiding the real toll of one of the worst massacres of its decade of conflict, explaining that to tell the truth at the time would have helped its militant Islamist foes.

    Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia told a briefing for local journalists on Tuesday that a massacre carried out by Islamist attackers in villages near Relizane town in January 1998 cost 1 000 lives, not the 100 or 150 then cited by officials.

    The massacre caused a storm of international concern, with European nations questioning the ability of Algeria's government to protect its citizens, and deepened jitters over the possible destabilising effect of the conflict on the wider Mediterranean.

    El Watan daily said the admission put in question the veracity of official accounts of the conflict at a sensitive time when the country has embarked on a national reconciliation process aimed at drawing a line under the bloodshed.

    "You will accuse us once again of lying, but in Ramka 1 000 people were massacred in the course of a single night," Liberte daily quoted Ouyahia as saying of one of the villages.

    "We hid the truth because you don't go into battle proclaiming defeat.

    "Those who carried out these massacres did not do them just to kill people, they did them to make the international community rise up against us," El Watan quoted him as saying.

    Blanket immunity

    Many Algerians are still traumatised by the conflict, in which 200 000 people, mostly civilians, were killed in clashes between the authorities and Islamist insurgents.

    The insurgency began in 1992 after the authorities cancelled legislative elections that a radical Islamist party was poised to win.

    The authorities had feared an Iranian-style revolution.

    Under an amnesty implemented this month, the security services won blanket immunity from prosecution while hundreds of former Islamist fighters, including some former leaders of armed Islamist gangs, walked free from prison.

    Some critics described the amnesty as too sweeping, saying it would encourage former rebels to resume armed action.

    But others disagree, saying the government should be trusted to know how best to bring a definitive end to the conflict. They point out that the broad lines of the amnesty were overwhelmingly approved by Algerians in a referendum last year.

    Political science professor Said Guessmi told Reuters: "The majority of Algerian people ... are no longer worried by statistics (of casualties).

    "Algerians are interested in the future. They want to turn the page."

    In central Algiers on Wednesday, about 40 demonstrators who lost relatives to Islamist attackers held a one-hour rally in opposition to the amnesty.

    "Terrorists were behind cutting throats of people. I will not forgive them.

    "They took my daughter Houda from a school before cutting her throat," said Amina Kouidri, from Larbaa, a village in an area known as the triangle of death.

    - Reuters



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