Army chief’s death deepens Algeria crisis

Bloomberg

The powerful Algerian army chief who played a key role in the resignation of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika died aged 79, injecting fresh drama into the OPEC member’s simmering political crisis.
Ahmed Gaid Salah suffered a heart attack at 6 a.m local time, Algerian state media reported on Monday. Three days of mourning were declared. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, who was elected this month in a controversial ballot Salah championed, described his death as a “cruel tragedy” and praised him as a hero.
With Bouteflika’s stepping down in April, Salah became the main target for protesters demanding a complete dismantling of the old regime and its backers. Demonstrators rejected the December 12 presidential vote, and Salah’s death seems unlikely to trigger a significant shift in the North African nation where the army can flex the most muscle, according to analysts.
“Gaid Salah’s death does not change the power configuration in Algeria,” said Anthony Skinner, Middle East and North Africa director at Verisk Maplecroft, the Bath, England-based risk consultancy. “The military remains the most powerful institution in Algeria and Tebboune will still have to accommodate the interests of senior military officials.”
Algeria, a gas-rich country on Europe’s doorstep, has been rocked by unrest since early 2019 that was sparked by Bouteflika’s bid for a fifth term. There’s been no letup since his April resignation, with protesters keeping to the streets to demand the removal of “le pouvoir,” a military, government and business elite that’s ruled since independence from France in the 1960s.
The economic stakes are high for Algeria, where Tebboune beat four other regime insiders in a ballot that saw the country’s lowest-ever turnout.
For years the government relied on high energy revenues to underwrite a subsidy system that kept the youth-majority population quiet. But the slump in crude ate into its foreign-currency reserves, forcing the government to consider breaking a long-standing taboo by turning to external borrowing.

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