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- <text id=91TT1874>
- <title>
- Aug. 26, 1991: Algeria:Searching for Salvation
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 32
- ALGERIA
- Searching for Salvation
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Lost in a political and economic morass, the country seeks a
- middle way between a police state and an Islamic republic
- </p>
- <p>By Lara Marlowe/Algiers
- </p>
- <p> Ominously recalling Iran in the months before the Ayatullah
- Khomeini's revolution, thousands of Muslim worshipers manifest
- their desire for an Islamic republic by walking to the Kouba
- mosque each Friday morning. The men flaunt their allegiance by
- wearing long cotton kamis and beards--reputedly the dress of
- the Prophet Muhammad. The sheik whom they come to hear speaks of
- martyrdom and sedition.
- </p>
- <p> "The Algerian people are Muslims," says the voice on the
- minaret's loudspeaker. "The police who prevent people from
- coming to prayers are not true Muslims." Security forces
- surrounding the mosque listen impassively as the message grows
- more strident. "This government ruined the country. It is the
- people who suffer from the economic crisis. The government
- claims it is Muslim, but if it is, why won't it proclaim Shari`a
- [Islamic law]? The people of Algeria want an Islamic state.
- They should be allowed to choose this freely."
- </p>
- <p> Such sermons have galvanized the discontented in a country
- mired in political and economic chaos. Earlier this year,
- members of the fundamentalist Islamic Salvation Front issued a
- manifesto of civil disobedience and occupied sections of Algiers
- to protest electoral laws that they claimed were devised to deny
- them victory in parliamentary elections originally scheduled for
- June. After some 100 people died in street fighting between the
- army and demonstrators, balloting was postponed and President
- Chadli Bendjedid declared a state of siege to restore calm.
- </p>
- <p> How could a nation that is geographically and culturally
- closer to Paris than to Mecca or Tehran come to such a pass? For
- years the government managed to contain the fundamentalists by
- building mosques and passing laws to placate them, then
- arresting leaders who became too powerful. But after political
- parties were legalized two years ago, the Islamic Salvation
- Front won an overwhelming majority in the June 1990 municipal
- elections, the first multiparty vote since Algeria gained
- independence from France in 1962. Then the gulf war sparked a
- fresh burst of anti-Western sentiment. If the fundamentalists
- ever come to power, they vow to outlaw alcohol, segregate the
- sexes and impose Shari`a, creating a society dramatically
- different from the socialist state built more than three decades
- ago by nationalist revolutionaries.
- </p>
- <p> While most Algerians profess to be devout Muslims, they do
- not wish to see the tyranny of socialism replaced by a tyranny
- of mullahs. But they do want to be led out of the country's
- political and economic chaos. Since 1962, the socialist National
- Liberation Front, which led the fight for independence, has
- ruled. The party lost credibility as its ideology failed to
- supply the European standard of living Algerians want.
- </p>
- <p> The economy is crippled, and many citizens blame the
- government's mismanagement and corruption. Unemployment is
- estimated at 30% of the work force. Housing and consumer goods
- are in scant supply. The drop in world oil prices has drained
- petro-revenues by two-thirds, and most of the remaining earnings
- go to service the $25 billion foreign debt. "When I see the
- poverty in the streets, I feel ill," says Zena Haraigue, who won
- Algeria's highest medal as a freedom fighter. "The government
- filled its pockets and its stomachs, and now they ask what's
- wrong with their young people."
- </p>
- <p> "Fundamentalism feeds on the crisis, it nourishes the
- crisis, and it will disappear with the crisis," says Said Saadi,
- leader of the secular Rally for Culture and Democracy. But
- neither the opposition parties nor the government has succeeded
- in capturing the imagination of the country's disaffected youth
- as the Islamic Salvation Front has. Nearly 75% of Algeria's
- population of 25 million are under 30, and more than one-third
- who leave school have no jobs. The fundamentalists promise to
- end corruption and bring prosperity to all.
- </p>
- <p> For now, martial law has brought a deceptive quiet to the
- streets. Some 6,000 people have been arrested, including most
- of the leaders of the Islamic Salvation Front. An overnight
- curfew has been lifted, and the army is in evidence only at the
- main radio and television stations and around the
- fundamentalist mosques. Last summer Algerians shunned the
- beaches to avoid intimidation by Islamic Salvation Front
- supporters, who chided men and women alike for showing their
- bodies. This year the beaches are again packed with bathers.
- </p>
- <p> Though political rallies are forbidden, Friday prayers--and audiocassettes of fiery sermons--enable the
- fundamentalists to spread their message of militancy. "If they
- exclude us," says Youssef, a chemistry teacher and Islamic
- Salvation Front militant, "we will go underground, and it will
- be much harder for them to control us."
- </p>
- <p> Government officials and centrist opposition leaders claim
- fundamentalism is just a phase that will disappear with the
- advent of democracy and a free-market economy. They point out
- that Algeria's Muslims are Sunni and have no Shi`ite tradition
- of radicalism and martyrdom. "Algeria is giving birth to
- democracy after nearly 30 years of one-party rule," says
- presidential spokesman Amin Zerouk. "It's not easy."
- </p>
- <p> Because Algerians have little experience in democracy,
- their plunge into multiparty politics is exuberant but naive.
- There are now 51 registered parties and 118 daily and weekly
- newspapers. "We are going through a period of libertarian
- childishness," says Zouaoui Benamedi, publisher of the weekly
- Algerie Actualite. "Everyone wants to express himself."
- </p>
- <p> But many are looking for what Hocine Ait-Ahmed, a hero of
- the independence war, calls "an alternative between the police
- state and an Islamic republic." The government has initiated an
- ambitious process of democratic reform, but it is ill-equipped
- to control its momentum. "The rest of the world should
- understand that we are undertaking a major transformation of our
- economic and political systems against a background of acute
- crisis," says Foreign Minister Lakhdar Ibrahimi. "My impression
- is that there is no likelihood of our becoming an Islamic
- republic." In the months to come, Algeria's leaders could find
- it difficult to keep to a middle course.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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