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Algeria protesters keep up pressure after resignations, arrests

ALGIERS — Algerian protesters vowed on Friday to keep up the pressure on the regime left behind by Abdelaziz Bouteflika, staging a tenth consecutive weekly mass rally after a string of people close to the toppled president were sacked or arrested over alleged graft.

“We want this system to leave and all the thieves to be judged,” said Zohra, a 55-year-old teacher who travelled some 350 kilometres  to attend the Algiers demonstration site with her 25-year-old son, Mohamed.

Hundreds of demonstrators gathered on Friday outside the capital’s emblematic post office headquarters, shouting: “you looted the country, thieves!”

El Watan newspaper, echoing social media calls for further protests to topple the entire “system”, led with the headline: “no half-revolution!”

The latest demonstrations followed the sackings of a string of senior regime officials and the detention of top businessmen including the country’s richest man, Issad Rebrab, over suspected corruption.

Authorities apparently intent on clearing away two decades of cronyism following Bouteflika’s ouster also reopened an investigation into an ex-energy minister close to the former president, state media reported on Wednesday.

And earlier in the week, the head of the vast state oil firm Sonatrach, Abdelmoumen Ould Kaddour, was also fired and replaced on the orders of interim president Abdelkader Bensalah.

Four brothers from the influential Kouninef family, close to Bouteflika’s brother Said, were also arrested on Sunday over alleged non-compliance with state contracts, according to state media.

 

 ‘Mafia and fraudsters’ 

 

But protesters have yet to win one of their key demands: the departure of Bensalah himself, a member of Bouteflika’s inner circle throughout his 20 years in power.

They are also demanding the ouster of another key ally of the toppled leader: Noureddine Bedoui, who remains prime minister in what protesters call “a government of shame”.

The interim administration has pledged to hold presidential elections on July 4, but demonstrators reject any such vote overseen by Bouteflika-era officials.

Protester Samir said he was against the poll.

“How mafia and fraudsters can hold honest elections? We’ll march until they understand,” he said.

The arrests come after army chief Ahmed Gaid Salah called on prosecutors to “accelerate the pace” of corruption probes into those with ties to Bouteflika’s inner circle.

The army has also insisted that the presidential vote take place within the timeframe set by the constitution. 

Some observers see the army’s pressure for prosecutions against allegedly corrupt individuals as an implicit offer of a deal to protesters: punishment of key figures or in exchange for a softening of demands, especially over the presidential poll. 

International Crisis Group warned on Friday that a stalemate was looming in Algeria as protesters and security forces “disagree on the pace and content of a political transition”.

“Despite repressive countermeasures, protesters showed no sign of giving in... The protests are only growing,” the Brussels-based think tank said in a briefing on Friday.

The government “should embark immediately on a dialogue with civil society leaders accepted by the protesters” to lay out a “political transition that would serve to restore confidence and prevent an uncontrolled cycle of violence”.

Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon, who is also a member of the national security Cabinet, told the website Ynet TV this month he was unaware of the fundraising. 

Regulators and law enforcement agencies have long worried about the potential of digital money — relatively anonymous and easily available online — to finance terrorism. 

Cryptocurrency regulations vary from country to country. The global watchdog for money laundering, aware of gaps in rules, is due to bring in the first international standards on cryptocurrency oversight by June.

But with regulation still patchy, the risk of exposure to tainted coins has kept most big investors away.

Even indirect exposure to tainted cryptocurrencies would present problems for financial firms, said Kyle Phillips, a lawyer at Fieldfisher law firm.

“There are real issues with establishing the beneficial owners,” he said.

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