Algeria: Two Islamist Parties Merge To Form “Front For Justice And Change”
Two Islamist parties namely the Front for Change led by Abdelmadjid Menasra and the Party for Justice and Development headed by Abdallah Djaballah have decided to pool their efforts by setting up a united Front called “the Front for Change and Justice” in a bid to further their political claims.
- This newly-created political Front will be led by islamist opposition figure Lakhdar Ben Khalfa who told Echorouk on the occasion that this two-party alliance would form an opposition parliamentary group entrusted with steadfastly lobbying for the “scrapping of the warped and flawed results of the May 10 legislative elections”, as he put it.
- This came as Islamist deputies disrupted the first session of the newly-elected national popular assembly Saturday, waving placards condemning alleged fraud in this month’s elections before walking out of the chamber.
- The 49 members of the three-party Green Algeria Alliance (AVV), a moderate Islamist coalition, staged their protest immediately after the roll-call of newly-elected deputies.
- They were followed out of the chamber by 28 lawmakers from the Political Front for the Safeguard of Democracy, a grouping formed after the results of the May 10 poll were announced, including parties which failed to win seats.
- The 462-seat lower house of Parliament, dominated by the ruling National Liberation Front (FLN), elected Mr Mohamed Larbi Ould Khalifa its new speaker later in the day for a 5 year mandate.
- Condemning “a return to the era of single party rule”, the AVV said in a statement: “We decided to withdraw from the first session of the National Assembly and protest officially against the results of the ballot.”
- Lakhdar Benkhelaf of the Islamist Front for Justice and Development, one of the parties in the Political Front for the Safeguard of Democracy, said the boycott of parliament was “a question of principle.”
- The AVV, which had confidently predicted victory in the election, alleged fraud after it won fewer than 50 seats.
- On Thursday, the constitutional council accepted only 13 of the 167 appeals filed after the poll, yielding minor changes in the breakdown of seats.
- The FLN saw its tally reduced to 208 from 221, while Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia’s National Rally for Democracy RND lost two seats but remains in second spot with 68 lawmakers, forming a comfortable majority with the FLN.
- The AVV was deprived of one seat but allocated another three, making its total 49, while the Socialist Forces Front, Algeria’s oldest opposition party that returned to the electoral fray this year after a 10-year boycott, saw its tally rise to 27.
- The main beneficiary of the constitutional council’s redistribution was the Workers Party PT, which was granted seven more seats and with 26, reached the legal threshold to form a parliamentary group.
- Opposition parties and other critics argue that the results announced by the interior ministry and confirmed by the constitutional council have little correlation with reality
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