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Iraq's Sadr warns MPs against rejecting new gov't

By - Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

An Iraqi protester waves the national flag amid clashes with riot police at Baghdad’s Al Khilani Square on February 19, during ongoing anti-government demonstrations (AFP photo)

 

NAJAF, Iraq — Populist cleric Moqtada Sadr returned to Iraq Saturday with a threat to organise protests outside parliament unless lawmakers back the government of prime minister-designate Mohammad Allawi in a confidence vote.

The Shiite cleric with a cult-like following in Iraq has thrown his weight behind the appointment of Allawi, despite the premier's rejection by a protest movement Sadr once backed.

The onetime anti-US militia leader whose supporters form the largest bloc in parliament had spent most of the past few months in neighbouring Iran but came back to whip up support for Allawi's government line-up.

As he visited the mausoleum of Imam Ali in Najaf, the Shiite shrine city where he resides, Sadr demanded that parliament approve the line-up in the coming days.

"If the session does not take place this week, or if lawmakers don't [back] a transparent Iraqi Cabinet in a vote... then this will require a demonstration of a million people," he tweeted. 

“Sit-ins around the Green Zone [where parliament is located] will have to be used to exert pressure,” he said.

Allawi has called for a vote of confidence to be held on Monday and has been backed by his predecessor Adel Abdel Mahdi, who bowed out as prime minister in December in the face of pressure from the street.

But the constitutional position is unclear.

Deputy Parliament Speaker Hassan Karim Al Kaabi, who is close to Sadr, told Iraqi media that Abdel Mahdi’s request for an extraordinary session to hold the confidence vote was binding.

But Parliament Speaker Mohammed Halbusi said he has not yet agreed to convene the session and several lawmakers from Iraq’s Sunni Arab minority said they would boycott any vote.

Sadr’s loyalists already paralysed the country in 2016 with massive sit-ins in front of parliament and government headquarters.

But this time, he may not be able to mobilise such large numbers, after losing favour among some of his backers for withdrawing his support from the protest movement.

 

Syria 'humanitarian nightmare' must end — UN's Guterres

Around 900,000 people have been displaced by fighting

By - Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

Displaced Syrians receive aid, consisting of heating material and drinking water, at a camp in the town of Mehmediye, near the town of Deir Al Ballut along the border with Turkey, on Friday (AFP photo)

UNITED NATIONS, United States — The "man-made humanitarian nightmare" in Syria's Idlib province must end now, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said Friday, but did not offer any specific plan for curbing the bloodshed in the final rebel holdout.

The ongoing violence in northwest Syria has forced nearly one million civilians to flee — the biggest wave of displacement of the nine-year conflict.

"This man-made humanitarian nightmare for the long-suffering people of Syria must stop. It must stop now," Guterres told reporters.

"The message is clear: There is no military solution for the Syrian crisis. The only possible solution remains political."

Guterres recalled that he had repeatedly called for an "immediate ceasefire" in Idlib, and urged all parties to avoid any escalation in the fighting.

“It is crucial to break the vicious circle of violence and suffering,” he said.

Since December 1, about 900,000 people have been displaced by the fighting, including more than 500,000 children, according to the United Nations.

“An estimated 2.8 million people in northwest Syria require humanitarian assistance,” Guterres said, launching an appeal for an additional $500 million in donations to help the displaced over the next six months.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to halt the Syrian regime’s violence in Idlib on Friday.

“The president during the call stressed that the regime should be restrained in Idlib and that the humanitarian crisis must be stopped,” the Turkish presidency said in a statement after the two leaders spoke by phone.

Conservatives ahead as Iran poll results trickle in

By - Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

TEHRAN — Conservatives took a lead Saturday as the first results of Iran's parliamentary election came in, boosted by a predicted low turnout following the disqualification of nearly half the candidates.

Friday's election followed months of steeply escalating tensions between Iran and its decades-old archfoe the United States.

Voters had been widely expected to shun the polls, disillusioned by unfulfilled promises and struggling to cope in a country whose economy has buckled under harsh US sanctions.

About half of the 16,000-odd candidates were barred. Among them were many reformists and moderates — including dozens of sitting lawmakers — leaving conservatives with virtually no competition.

The National Elections Committee said votes had been counted in 162 constituencies out of 208.

Tehran is the biggest catch in the election with 30 seats.

The conservative and ultra-conservative alliance appeared to have a comfortable edge in the capital in preliminary results, the committee's spokesman Esmail Mousavi said.

Most votes went to the first three names on the alliance's list, he said.

Leading the race was Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, a three-time presidential candidate, former police chief and member of the Revolutionary Guards who was Tehran mayor from 2005 to 2017.

Reformists and moderates hardly figured in the 37 other names of "leading Tehran candidates", Mousavi said.

Final results for both the capital and other provinces would be announced by early Sunday at the latest, he added.

If the conservatives’ resurgence is confirmed, it will mean President Hassan Rouhani’s slender majority of reformists and moderates elected with fanfare four years ago is nearly purged.

“A lot of people voted in the previous parliamentary election, but the enthusiasm faded away every day after that,” Ali, a Tehran taxi driver, told AFP.

“And now there’s nothing to be hopeful about to go and vote,” added the 53-year-old, who abstained.

With official figures still coming in, news outlets close to conservatives and ultra-conservatives have predicted a landslide win for their candidates across Iran.

An unofficial tally published by Fars news agency said 241 of parliament’s 290 seats had already been decided, with conservative candidates winning 191.

Reformists were a distant second at 16, it said, adding independents had won 34 seats.

The state television website said most of the 56 winners announced on Saturday were fresh faces and only 10 were former members of parliament.

Fars tweeted that turnout in Tehran was 1.9 million out of more than nine million eligible voters.

Many in the capital seem to have sat out the election, including Arghavan Aram, who manages an NGO for transsexuals.

“An election with only one faction is not an election, it’s a selection,” she said.

 

‘Natural’ turnout 

 

Political figures across the spectrum discussed the cause of what may be a historically low turnout, even though final figures have yet to be released.

“Such a turnout is natural in an election where progressive reformists couldn’t present candidates due to unprecedented disqualifications,” Emad Bahavar, a reformist activist, tweeted.

Abdollah Ganji, editor-in-chief of ultra-conservative Javan daily, asked his Twitter followers about the low turnout, and those who responded said economic problems were the main cause.

Tweeting his congratulations to conservatives, prominent right-wing figure Ezzatollah Zarghami said it would be “very important” to get to the root cause of the low turnout.

The 11th parliamentary election since the 1979 Islamic Revolution comes after a surge in tensions between Tehran and Washington, and Iran’s accidental downing of a Ukrainian airliner that sparked anti-government protests.

Turnout was estimated at around 40 per cent nationwide and 30 per cent in Tehran at the scheduled close of polls on Friday, according to Fars.

But authorities extended polling for another six hours to allow as many people as possible to vote.

Schools were closed in dozens of urban centres on Saturday while the count went ahead.

Iran fell into a deep recession after US President Donald Trump reimposed sanctions following Washington’s unilateral withdrawal from a landmark nuclear deal in 2018.

Thousands hit streets of Algiers on protest movement anniversary

By - Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

Members of the Algerian police block the progress of an anti-government demonstration heading towards the presidential palace in the capital Algiers on Saturday (AFP photo)

ALGIERS — Several thousand people gathered in the Algerian capital Saturday on the first anniversary of a protest movement that seeks an overhaul of the political system and forced the former president to resign.

Protesters shouted "the people want the fall of the government" and "we have come to get rid of you", referring to the country's rulers.

"No to military power, civil not military state" was written on one banner, referring to the authority exercised by the high military command since the country's independence from France in 1962.

Mass protests first erupted on February 22 last year, in response to President Abdelaziz Bouteflika announcing he intended a run for a fifth term — despite being debilitated by a 2013 stroke.

Less than six weeks later, he stepped down after losing the support of the then-army chief in the face of enormous weekly demonstrations.

Despite hordes — diplomats said "millions" — turning out after Bouteflika's fall to demand an overhaul of the entire system, the military maintained a political stranglehold in the months that followed.

Police were deployed around the Grande Poste in central Algiers in numbers unusual for a Saturday, as people responded to calls on social media to celebrate the first anniversary of the "Hirak" protest movement.

Friday had seen the 53rd straight weekly demonstration, with Algerians flooding the streets of Algiers and numerous other cities across the country.

Even as the unprecedented movement has thinned in numbers since December, protesters still turn out in droves on a weekly basis.

President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, a former prime minister under Bouteflika who was elected in December, had recently claimed that "things are starting to calm" in the streets and that "the Hirak got almost everything it wanted".

 

'Saudi Arabia intercepts Yemen rebel missiles targeting cities'

By - Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

In this file photo taken on September 06, 2016, Yemeni female fighters supporting the Shiite Houthi rebels holds weapons as they take part in an anti-Saudi rally in the capital Sanaa (AFP photo)

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia has intercepted missiles fired towards its cities by Houthi rebels in neighbouring Yemen, the Riyadh-led military coalition said, in the insurgents' latest cross-border attack.

A Houthi spokesman quoted by the rebels' Al Masirah TV said Friday the group had targeted oil installations in the kingdom with 12 Sammad-3 drones, two cruise missiles and a ballistic missile. 

The Saudi-led coalition said the projectiles "were launched in a systematic, deliberate manner to target cities and civilians, which is a flagrant defiance of international humanitarian law".

Yemen's capital Sanaa "has become a Houthi militia assembly, installation and launching hub for ballistic missiles that target the kingdom," said coalition spokesman Turki Al Maliki, in a statement released Thursday by the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

The Houthi spokesman said an attack targeted Saudi oil giant Aramco's facilities in Yanbu, north of Jeddah in the west of the kingdom, and stressed that the targets "were hit with precision".

He promised further attacks against Saudi Arabia in "case of continued aggression and economic blockade".

Saudi Arabia has repeatedly accused Iran of supplying sophisticated weapons to the Houthis, a charge Tehran denies.

The US on Wednesday also accused Tehran of delivering weapons to the rebels, citing arms it said it had intercepted, days after the Houthis claimed to have shot down a Saudi jet with an "advanced surface-to-air missile".

The coalition intervened in support of the Yemeni government in 2015 when President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi fled into Saudi exile as the rebels closed in on his last remaining territories in and around Aden.

Since then, the conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, many of them civilians, relief agencies say.

The fighting has triggered what the United Nations describes as the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with millions displaced and in need of aid.

Iraqi Kurds rally against ‘corruption’ of ruling elite

Rallies demand an overhaul of the federal government

By - Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

Head of the Iraqi Kurdish ‘New Generation Movement’ Shaswar Abdulwahid Qadir speaks during a rally his movement called for to protest corruption and scarcity of services, in Freedom square in the northern city of Sulaimaniyah, on Saturday (AFP photo)

SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq — Thousands on Saturday rallied against poor public services and "corruption" among the ruling elite in their autonomous region, an AFP correspondent said.

The rallies led by the New Generation movement, an opposition party, came amid ongoing protests since October in Baghdad and Iraq's south demanding an overhaul of the federal government.

"Fix the unemployment problem," read one banner.

"Public services quickly," read another.

The autonomous Kurdish region, which initially saw an economic boom when the rest of the country descended into violence after the 2003 US invasion, is considered to be more secure and prosperous than Iraq as a whole.

But an economic crisis worsened by conflict with the Daesh group and tumbling global oil prices has given rise to periodic protests in more recent years, especially in the northeastern city of Sulaimaniyah.

On Saturday, thousands took to the streets of the city to decry tough living conditions in a region which has been autonomous since 1991.

The New Generation movement was founded in 2018 to channel public anger at the region's elite.

Iraqi Kurdistan has been split for decades between the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) — led by the Barzani family — and its rival, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), headed by the Talabani clan.

New Generation leader Shaswar Abdulwahid, said the ruling elite have "failed to [properly] administer the region" for 29 years.

"By way of demonstrations, we will bring hope back to the youths and the entire Kurdish community", in Iraq, he said in a speech during the rally.

He said Saturday's protests were only a "first step".

A previous demonstration in Sulaimaniyah in December 2017 ended in bloodshed, with five protesters killed by police.

Since 2014, Iraqi Kurdistan has borrowed more than $4 billion (3.7 million euros) to stay afloat, experts say.

According to the UN, 36 per cent of households across Iraqi Kurdistan — home to around six million people — eke out a living on less than $400 per month.

Iraq is ranked 16th from bottom in Transparency International's 2019 Corruption Perceptions Index.

UAE falcon hospital a window into Emirati tradition

Feb 22,2020 - Last updated at Feb 22,2020

The owner of a falcon holds the bird of prey in front of the Abu Dhabi Falcon Hospital on January 27 (AFP photo)

ABU DHABI — Eid Al Qobeissy's two birds perch majestically in the waiting room of Abu Dhabi's falcon hospital, awaiting a routine check-up ahead of their hunting trip to Azerbaijan.

Like other well-travelled residents of the United Arab Emirates, the falcons will make the journey with their devoted owner on a well-worn route from a country where the creature is both a national symbol and treasured tradition.

"This has been a hobby of mine since 2007," said the 26-year-old, gently stroking one of the prized birds of prey, which wear leather hoods to keep them calm and quiet.

After waiting in the pristine white-marbled reception area of the animal hospital, the falcons will undergo blood tests in order to complete paperwork for the trip.

They are among about 11,000 falcons the hospital treats annually, a number that has more than doubled in the past 10 years.

"Falcons have a very special place in the heart of the Emiratis," said the hospital's director Margit Muller.

"Here, falcons are not considered birds, they are considered children of the bedouins because, historically, falcons were used to hunt meat, allowing the bedouin's family to survive in this very harsh desert life."

In 2010, UNESCO added falconry to its list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

 

Talons and training 

 

The Abu Dhabi facility is the world's largest falcon hospital, frequented by falconers from across the Gulf region.

As well as check-ups and routine trimming of talons, it also conducts complicated surgery and offers a training programme for veterinary students from more than 40 countries to learn about avian medicine.

"The very complicated procedures are either broken legs or broken wings, or when a falcon has a really messy accident that results in big injuries," Muller said.

"Very long surgeries... can take up to three or four hours. That is the longest we can keep a falcon under anaesthesia."

Opportunities to take a falcon hunting are limited in the UAE, where it is only permitted in designated reserves.

That means that for many birds, the hospital is an essential stop-off before heading to popular overseas hunting destinations including Morocco, Kazakhstan and Pakistan.

Emirati falconers are only legally allowed to own captive-bred birds, which must have their own passports that comply with the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) for transport.

Animals other than guide dogs are not usually allowed in the cabins of the UAE's main carriers, but for falcons exceptions are made.

Abu Dhabi's Etihad permits falcons in the cabin or as checked baggage, and Dubai's Emirates allows birds to travel alongside their owner to certain destinations in Pakistan.

"The most popular destination for falconers travelling with their falcons in the passenger cabin is Pakistan," an Emirates spokeswoman told AFP.

 

Girl power 

 

While the hospital has its own programme and facilities to breed falcons that can be purchased, most of the birds are imported to the UAE from breeders in the Americas and Europe.

"They stay with the falconer for as long as they live," Muller said. "They will not be released because they are captive-bred falcons."

Muller added that the most sought-after and expensive falcons are females, which can carry up to five times their own body weight. They are also considered the most beautiful.

"The female is usually one third bigger than the male, and more powerful," she said, adding that captive-bred female falcons can cost upwards of 100,000 euros ($108,000).

For falconer Salem al-Mansouri from Abu Dhabi, the tradition is much more than an expensive pastime — it is a symbol of Emirati culture.

"Falcons were used to hunt, and you can say that it was the only method for hunting for survival, especially when travelling long distances hundreds of years ago," the 30-year-old told AFP.

"We inherited it from our grandfathers and fathers, who taught us, and now we teach the next generation."

Netanyahu plans East Jerusalem settler units ahead of Israel poll

By - Feb 20,2020 - Last updated at Feb 20,2020

This photo taken on Thursday shows a partial view of the Israeli settlement of Har Homa in the occupied East Jerusalem, with the West Bank city of Bethlehem in the background (AFP photo)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel's embattled PM Benjamin Netanyahu announced plans on Thursday to build thousands of new settler units in occuiped East Jerusalem, a controversial project unveiled less than two weeks before a general election.

The Palestinians immediately condemned the move as a campaign tactic ahead of the March 2 vote, designed to please nationalist voters who could prove crucial to the prime minister's political survival.

"Netanyahu's attempts to win right-wing Israeli votes... at the expense of Palestinian rights will not bring peace and stability to anyone," said a statement from a spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

The Palestinian leader also warned the move "will lead to more tension and violence in the region", in the statement carried by the official WAFA news agency.

Earlier, Netanyahu's office released a video in which the Israeli leader announced: "I have huge news today — we're adding another 2,200 units to Har Homa."

The contentious Har Homa community was first built in 1997, under a previous Netanyahu government.

The initial settlement construction in the area known as Jabal Abu Ghneim to the Palestinians sparked violent protests.

The prime minister boasted on Thursday that he had approved the initial build “despite objections from the entire world” and estimated that Har Homa’s population would grow from 40,000 to 50,000 when the new units were completed.

Netanyahu also announced approval for a new settlement  in Givat Hamatos, next to the mainly Palestinian East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Beit Safafa.

That development will include 3,000 homes for Jewish residents and 1,000 “for the Arab residents of Beit Safafa”, Netanyahu said.

Settlement watchdog Peace Now called the Givat Hamatos project “a severe blow to the two-state solution”, as it would interrupt “territorial continuity between Bethlehem and East Jerusalem.”

Israel seized East Jerusalem in the 1967 June War. It later occupied it in a move never recognised by the international community.

Israli settlements in East Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank are also considered illegal by most foreign governments and the United Nations.

 

No mandate? 

 

Netanyahu, 70, will stand trial next month after being indicted for bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

He denies wrongdoing but the indictments have complicated his bid to extend his tenure as Israel’s longest serving prime minister.

Two elections in April and September last year failed to produce a clear winner.

Recent polls are forecasting another tight race between Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud and the centrist Blue and White Party led by former military chief Benny Gantz.

Peace Now argued that a caretaker government, like the one Netanyahu is currently leading, does not have the capacity to green light controversial projects that further limit prospects for a future Palestinian state.

“Such a change of policy can’t happen in a transitional government without a mandate from the public,” the watchdog said.

Netanyahu has previously been accused of making last-minute campaign pledges as a play for vital right-wing support.

Peace Now blasted his latest announcement as “another cynical election trick”.

Ahead of the September vote, he vowed to annex the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank if reelected.

Earlier this week, details emerged about his government’s plan to build to 9,000 settler units in the Atarot area of East Jerusalem.

US President Donald Trump’s Middle East peace plan gives Israel permission to extend its sovereignty over those communities.

Trump’s plan, cheered by both Netanyahu and Gantz, has been rejected by the Palestinians.

170,000 people living in the open in northwest Syria — UN

By - Feb 20,2020 - Last updated at Feb 20,2020

A displaced Syrian girl rides in the back of a truck on the way to Deir Al Ballut camp in Afrin's countryside along the border with Turkey, on Wednesday, after fleeing government offensive on the last major rebel bastion in the country's northwest (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — An estimated 170,000 of the 900,000 civilians forced from their homes in a massive wave of displacement in northwestern Syria are living out in the open, the UN said Thursday.

The largest displacement since the war in Syria broke out nearly nine years ago comes in the thick of winter, with temperatures often dipping below zero Celsius and snow covering some districts.

"Harsh winter conditions further aggravate the suffering of these vulnerable people who fled their homes to escape the violence, most of whom have been displaced multiple times over nine years of conflict," the United Nations said.

In its latest update, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said around a fifth of those newly displaced were sleeping rough.

"Almost 170,000 of those newly displaced people are estimated to be living in the open or in unfinished buildings," it said.

The UN said that the camps sheltering some of the rest were overstretched and that many families were pitching tents on plots with no access to basic services such as latrines.

The UN's top humanitarian coordinator Mark Lowcock had warned earlier this week that a ceasefire was needed to avert a humanitarian disaster on a scale yet unseen in the Syria war.

The UN has called on Turkey to take in more refugees, arguing that the emergency is extreme.

Turkey, which already hosts the world's largest number of Syrian refugees with around 3.6 million people, wants to avoid another mass influx.

Algeria city recalls protest that morphed into uprising

By - Feb 20,2020 - Last updated at Feb 20,2020

Algerian students and other protesters take part in an anti-government demonstration in the capital Algiers, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BORDJ BOU ARRERIDJ, Algeria — When a group of young people took to the streets of an Algerian industrial city a year ago, they had no idea their protest would be part of a thousands-strong movement that would topple their veteran president.

Thousands-strong protests hit the capital Algiers on February 22 last year in an outpouring of frustration after President Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced he would stand for a fifth term.

But with its own crowds and massive protest banners, it was Bordj Bou Arreridj that social media users dubbed the capital of the "Hirak" movement which ended Bouteflika's two-decade rule.

The ailing 82-year-old had been in power for two decades but had rarely been seen in public since a 2013 stroke that left him largely incapacitated.

Young Algerians, suffering massive unemployment in a country where the majority is under 30, were fed up with being represented by an octogenarian whose rare public appearances elicited mockery online.

Anger peaked when, during a meeting of the president’s party, apparatchiks addressed a portrait of Bouteflika in the absence of the ailing leader himself.

“We had become the laughing stock of the world”, said 24-year-old student Larbi.

“I didn’t think about the consequences. Anger outweighed fear.”

On February 13, days before the rallies in Algiers, residents of Bordj Bou Arreridj began their protests.

A young tailor named Brahim Lalami “went out alone with a large sign opposing the fifth term: ‘The straw that broke the camel’s back, an insult to an entire people’”, said Ali, an unemployed resident of the city.

Ali and others joined him, and the group marched through the streets of Bordj Bou Arreridj in what would become the first Hirak movement demonstration.

In a video published that day on social media, a few dozen men can be seen marching confidently and chanting, “Bouteflika, there will be no fifth term”.

Lalami went on to become a key figure in the movement.

Bouteflika resigned on April 2 after losing the support of key loyalists, including the army.

 

‘No fifth term’ 

 

Originally an agricultural area, the Bordj Bou Arreridj region around 170 kilometres southeast of Algiers is known as the country’s “electronics capital”.

It attracts companies including Algerian firm Condor Electronics and South Korean giant Samsung and reputedly has lower unemployment rates than elsewhere.

But it still suffers from problems affecting Algeria generally, including red tape and clientelism.

Razi, an unemployed 33-year-old, said the city had always been hostile to Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

He recalled that during the Algeria Cup football final in 2009, supporters of the local club turned their back on the president when he arrived at the stadium.

Following the February 13 demonstration, a larger protest was held three days later in Kherrata to the northeast.

On February 19, a portrait of Bouteflika was taken down from a facade of the town hall in Khenchela, further east.

Then, on February 22, protesters took to the streets of cities across the country, with thousands defying a ban on protests in the capital.

“I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw that Algerians had come out everywhere,” Ali recalled, still emotional.

Today, the protests are smaller than in spring 2019, but the Hirak movement remains strong.

On December 12, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, Bouteflika’s former prime minister, won the country’s presidential election.

The poll was marked by massive abstention, with protesters demanding sweeping changes before a legitimate vote could be held.

The next day Tebboune called for dialogue with protesters, who nevertheless stayed on the streets.

The Hirak wants to influence the changes promised by the new president but is struggling to structure itself and agree on a future strategy.

“The revolution still hasn’t gotten rid of the ‘system’” in place since Algeria became independent in 1962, said Bilal, who is part of a forum of young protesters in Bordj Bou Arreridj.

But, he added: “We’re still here.”

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