- Title: ALGERIA: President Abdelaziz Bouteflika parades through streets ahead of election
- Date: 6th April 2009
- Summary: TEBESSA, ALGERIA (MARCH 31, 2009) (REUTERS) LARGE POSTER FOR ALGERIAN PRESIDENT ABDELAZIZ BOUTEFLIKA HANGING FROM BUILDING VARIOUS OF MUSICIANS PLAYING TRADITIONAL MUSIC MEN WEARING TRADITIONAL GUARD COSTUMES RIDING HORSES MORE OF MEN PLAYING MUSIC IN STREET
- Embargoed: 21st April 2009 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Algeria
- Country: Algeria
- Topics: Domestic Politics
- Reuters ID: LVAL1TNF1Z3HTV793VSBKKPNIMB
- Story Text: Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika hits the streets of the small northeastern towns of Tebessa and Oum El Bouaghi to cheering crowds ahead of an election campaign boycotted by the opposition and set to win him a third term in office.
Algeria's incumbent president Abdelaziz Bouteflika walked through the streets of Tebessa on Tuesday (March 31) to a cheering crowd ahead of an election that is set to see him secure a third term in office.
Government critics cried foul when the country's parliament amended the north African OPEC member's constitution last year to allow the 72-year-old Bouteflika to seek another five-year mandate.
Well-known opposition figures are boycotting the April 9 poll and the fact that none of the president's five challengers has much chance, raises the prospect of a low turnout that would underscore popular apathy towards formal politics.
Supporters say Bouteflika deserves the trust of the people for steering Africa's second-largest country back to stability after a civil conflict in the 1990s that claimed an estimated 150,000 lives.
Crowds cheered and held pictures of the president as he walked through the streets of Tebessa.
He promised voters 150 billion dollars for development spending if elected and vowed to create 3 million jobs, address a housing shortage by building 1 million homes and build hospitals, schools and universities.
He says he would press ahead with a national reconciliation policy under which thousands of Islamist rebels have already disarmed.
Algeria's economy relies heavily on oil and gas exports and the non-oil sector is too weak to create enough jobs for an overwhelmingly young population.
Analysts say it will be harder to defeat the remaining hard core of Al Qaeda-aligned insurgents and ensure long-term stability unless the government re-connects with young people who view politicians as self-serving and out of touch.
Unemployment in Algeria stands officially at 11 percent but is estimated at more than 70 percent among adults under 30 and it is suggested that as many as half of Algerian young men are tempted by illegal emigration.
Turnout in a 2007 legislative poll was 35 percent, the lowest of any Algerian election to date. The government has sent millions of mobile phone SMS messages urging people to vote.
Islamist rebels have stepped up attacks before the election and the death toll from political violence in February reached 33.
Officials say the government has the intelligence capability to infiltrate insurgent groups and enough troops on the ground to foil rebel attacks aimed at disrupting the poll. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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