Berliner Boersenzeitung - Algeria's 60 years of complex relations with former occupier France

EUR -
AED 4.24886
AFN 76.755988
ALL 96.705015
AMD 442.955826
ANG 2.070898
AOA 1060.912737
ARS 1625.564282
AUD 1.782648
AWG 2.088273
AZN 1.971388
BAM 1.956939
BBD 2.329306
BDT 141.154573
BGN 1.95614
BHD 0.432708
BIF 3405.840612
BMD 1.156938
BND 1.506102
BOB 8.002553
BRL 6.169262
BSD 1.156493
BTN 102.503415
BWP 15.526833
BYN 3.941462
BYR 22675.988338
BZD 2.325823
CAD 1.625325
CDF 2487.417507
CHF 0.931775
CLF 0.027843
CLP 1092.288933
CNY 8.236648
CNH 8.243359
COP 4373.226322
CRC 580.647896
CUC 1.156938
CUP 30.658862
CVE 110.329197
CZK 24.306697
DJF 205.611509
DKK 7.470586
DOP 74.302913
DZD 149.721294
EGP 54.319055
ERN 17.354073
ETB 178.522661
FJD 2.642737
FKP 0.878859
GBP 0.879199
GEL 3.129564
GGP 0.878859
GHS 12.646194
GIP 0.878859
GMD 84.456898
GNF 10038.841239
GTQ 8.862042
GYD 241.954968
HKD 9.001269
HNL 30.407693
HRK 7.537498
HTG 153.9289
HUF 384.867503
IDR 19304.092011
ILS 3.773991
IMP 0.878859
INR 102.550427
IQD 1514.981513
IRR 48707.097807
ISK 146.445681
JEP 0.878859
JMD 185.618004
JOD 0.820315
JPY 177.514855
KES 149.480811
KGS 101.174688
KHR 4654.668151
KMF 487.071379
KPW 1041.242842
KRW 1684.490865
KWD 0.355069
KYD 0.963752
KZT 607.123759
LAK 25109.284637
LBP 103560.815603
LKR 352.501201
LRD 211.171961
LSL 20.032989
LTL 3.416138
LVL 0.699821
LYD 6.314674
MAD 10.720138
MDL 19.717217
MGA 5197.957111
MKD 61.557148
MMK 2428.95031
MNT 4145.120637
MOP 9.26415
MRU 45.809655
MUR 53.11547
MVR 17.822678
MWK 2005.401538
MXN 21.347365
MYR 4.831419
MZN 73.986633
NAD 20.032556
NGN 1661.363625
NIO 42.555497
NOK 11.754927
NPR 164.005264
NZD 2.055318
OMR 0.44128
PAB 1.156558
PEN 3.902838
PGK 4.882841
PHP 68.034333
PKR 327.015732
PLN 4.24089
PYG 8182.761253
QAR 4.214953
RON 5.089144
RSD 118.204806
RUB 93.56087
RWF 1680.363218
SAR 4.339343
SBD 9.522286
SCR 15.794975
SDG 694.74563
SEK 11.025394
SGD 1.505221
SHP 0.868003
SLE 26.845208
SLL 24260.414632
SOS 660.875971
SRD 44.656701
STD 23946.284488
STN 24.514688
SVC 10.118888
SYP 12792.126056
SZL 20.040007
THB 37.479056
TJS 10.674072
TMT 4.060853
TND 3.418489
TOP 2.709669
TRY 48.833247
TTD 7.83946
TWD 35.844032
TZS 2840.283621
UAH 48.493817
UGX 4047.442521
USD 1.156938
UYU 46.056799
UZS 13947.115322
VES 264.006395
VND 30439.043529
VUV 141.365386
WST 3.263611
XAF 656.333224
XAG 0.023931
XAU 0.000289
XCD 3.126684
XCG 2.084249
XDR 0.817973
XOF 656.3389
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.933908
ZAR 20.019316
ZMK 10413.836097
ZMW 26.164885
ZWL 372.533622
  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.1

    +0.37%

  • GSK

    -0.4700

    46.63

    -1.01%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    15.76

    0%

  • NGG

    1.4600

    77.75

    +1.88%

  • RELX

    -1.1200

    42.27

    -2.65%

  • RIO

    0.0600

    69.33

    +0.09%

  • RBGPF

    -0.7800

    75.22

    -1.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    14.88

    +0.54%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.85

    +0.29%

  • AZN

    0.8100

    84.58

    +0.96%

  • BCC

    -0.0900

    70.64

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    0.2400

    11.58

    +2.07%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.74

    -0.07%

  • BCE

    0.0200

    23.19

    +0.09%

  • BP

    0.7600

    36.58

    +2.08%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    54.59

    +0.7%

Algeria's 60 years of complex relations with former occupier France
Algeria's 60 years of complex relations with former occupier France

Algeria's 60 years of complex relations with former occupier France

In the 60 years since Algeria won independence from France, it has gone through multiple crises with its former occupier, often fuelled by domestic politics.

Text size:

Yet the two sides had surprisingly good relations for the first four decades, and it was only in the 1990s that things started to fall apart, experts say.

"Generally, despite appearances and criticism, there has been a stable, very balanced relationship," said Luis Martinez, a Maghreb researcher at Sciences Po university in Paris.

That is despite the devastation caused by the eight-year war of independence that finally led to the signing of the Evian accords on March 18, 1962, ending the conflict.

French historians say half a million civilians and combatants died -- 400,000 of them Algerian -- while the Algerian authorities insist 1.5 million were killed.

Under French General Charles de Gaulle, whose administration signed the accords, and his successor Georges Pompidou, Paris had good relations with Algiers.

The same was true of the administration of Francois Mitterrand, even though he had been interior minister when Algeria's armed independence struggle began in 1954 and remained opposed to the country's independence.

"Mitterrand was surrounded by Socialist Party people, who were all pro-FLN," said historian Pierre Vermeren, referring to the National Liberation Front, which led the revolt and has dominated Algerian politics ever since.

"(Mitterrand) was able to take a back seat" and let others deal with Algeria, said Vermeren, a professor at the Sorbonne University.

France was allowed to continue its nuclear tests in the Algerian Sahara until 1967, and de Gaulle managed to negotiate a secret deal with the new Algerian state to allow for chemical weapons tests until 1978.

But in 1992, Paris raised hackles by criticising Algiers for suspending elections, in which Islamist parties had won the first round.

Algeria withdrew its ambassador in response.

The polls' cancellation sparked another decade of devastating conflict in the North African country, until Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who rose to the presidency in 1999, offered an amnesty that paved the way for peace.

Despite being close to France, Bouteflika made use of anti-French discourse, primarily for domestic consumption, Vermeren said.

"To win back control of the ideological and political sphere after the civil war, (the Algerian leadership) 'forgot' that France had helped them fight the Islamists," he said.

"They went back to their traditional enemy."

- 'Good ties in secret' -

Under Bouteflika, Algerian leaders used ever-stronger language, accusing France of "genocide" during its more than 130-year occupation of Algeria.

Then, in 2019, a vast protest movement toppled the autocratic leader after two decades in power -- but the new regime has kept up the anti-French discourse.

Observers say however that cooperation behind closed doors has been surprisingly close.

In 2013, Algeria allowed French forces to use its airspace to reach Mali, where they were battling jihadists.

"French-Algerian relations are good when they're in secret. They're more hostile when they're in public," said Naoufel Brahimi El Mili, who has written a book on 60 years of "secret stories" between the two countries.

When Emmanuel Macron became president, he had good relations with Algeria.

Visiting Algiers during his campaign in February 2017, he described colonisation as a "crime against humanity".

After his election, he made gestures aimed at healing past wounds on both sides of the Mediterranean.

But he refused to apologise for colonialism, a highly sensitive topic in France, which for decades saw Algeria as an integral part of French territory and where far-right discourse has been escalating.

Comments reported last October dampened hopes around reconciliation.

Macron accused Algeria's "political-military system" of rewriting history and fomenting "hatred towards France".

In remarks to descendants of independence fighters, reported by Le Monde, he also questioned whether Algeria had existed as a nation before the French invasion in the 1800s.

Once again, Algeria withdrew its ambassador.

- 'Algeria votes Macron' -

Now, weeks ahead of the French presidential election in April, relations appear to be looking up again.

Millions of French citizens of Algerian origin and descendants of Europeans who left after independence are among those casting votes.

"Algeria will vote for Macron," said author El Mili. "Algerians are convinced that a Macron II will be bolder."

Xavier Driencourt, a former French ambassador to Algeria, shared that view.

"They don't want (candidate) Valerie Pecresse who has a fairly right-wing tone, and definitely not (Eric) Zemmour or Marine Le Pen," he said, referring to conservative Pecresse and two far-right presidential hopefuls.

But much remains to be done. In recent years Algeria has diversified its international ties, with China becoming its main trade partner.

Martinez from Sciences Po said Macron's comments had done a lot of damage.

"They'll go back to the drawing board, and try to see what they can agree on," he said.

Former envoy Driencourt said "it takes two sides to have a relationship".

Would Algeria be interested after the election?

"I'm not very optimistic," he said.

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)