The story of
Algeria's past, present and future - from independence to the
Arab Spring and beyond. Algeria was under
French colonial rule for 132 years. From tears of joy at independence in 1962 to the tragic civil war of the
1990s and the anger that culminated in the Arab Spring, this series provides a unique insight into a country notoriously inaccessible to both journalists and filmmakers.
Interviews with key players like
Ben Bella, Ait
Ahmed and
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, cover 50 years of tragic and powerful history from the
Evian Accords of 1962 to the Arab Spring of
2011. This is the story of Algeria's past, present and future. Era of Tempests
In October of
1988, the
Algerian army opened fire on protesters, killing
500 civilians. This brutal attack sparked uprisings that in-turn prompted the government to abandon three decades of single-party socialism in favour of a multi-party system. Journalists and citizens celebrated their new-found freedom.
Thirty years after independence, Algeria became the site of what many call the 'first Arab Spring' after Algerians demanded democracy and social and economic equality.
Political freedom allowed Islamist movements to garner more support. The
Islamic Salvation Front (
FIS), which gathered momentum under the one-party system because of its grounding in religion rather than politics, had gained increasing support during the
1990 municipal election. Then, in
1991, it won almost half of the votes in the first round of the legislative election. Fearing a majority win for the FIS, the military stepped in and halted the democratic electoral process. It forced
Chadli Bendjedid, then president, to abdicate and presented his resignation as voluntary. The second round of elections were cancelled and
Mohamed Boudiaf, who had returned after a 27-year exile in
Morocco, became Algeria's new leader as the chairman of the
High Council of the
State, a figurehead body
for the ruling generals.
Boudiaf tried to bring the parties together but quickly made enemies. And after his assassination in
1992, terrorist attacks increased and Algeria spiralled into a decade of civil war that claimed thousands of lives.
- published: 26 Mar 2014
- views: 45554