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Algerian Civil War

The Algerian Civil War (Arabic: الْحَرْبُ الْأَهْلِيَّةُ الجَزَائِرِيَّةُ, romanizedal-Ḥarb al-ʾAhlīyah al-Jazāʾirīyah) was a civil war in Algeria fought between the Algerian government and various Islamist rebel groups from 26 December 1991 (following a coup negating an Islamist electoral victory) to 8 February 2002. The war began slowly, as it initially appeared the government had successfully crushed the Islamist movement, but armed groups emerged to declare jihad and by 1994, violence had reached such a level that it appeared the government might not be able to withstand it.[24] By 1996–97, it had become clear that the Islamist resistance had lost its popular support, although fighting continued for several years after.[24]

Algerian Civil War

Military deployed in the streets of Algiers after the military coup against the Islamists, 12 January 1992.
Date26 December 1991 – 8 February 2002[18]
(10 years, 1 month, 1 week and 6 days)
Location
Result

Government victory

Belligerents

 Government of Algeria

Supported by:
 Tunisia[2][3]
 European Union[4]
 France[3][4]
 Egypt[2][3]

 South Africa[5][6]

FIS loyalists

  • AIS (1994–99)
  • MIA (until 1994)
  • MEI (until 1994)
  • FIDA (until 1996)
  • MIPD (1996–97)
  • LIDD (1997)

Supported by:
Libya (until 1995)[3]
 Morocco (alleged)[3][7][8]
 Saudi Arabia (pre-war)[4]
 Iran (alleged)[4]

Saudi private donors[4]

GIA (from 1993)

Supported by:
 Sudan (alleged)[10][11][12]
 Iran (alleged)[10][11][12]
Finsbury Park Mosque[13][14]
Brandbergen Mosque[15][16]
EIJ (until 1995)[17]


GSPC (from 1998)
Supported by
Al-Qaeda[10]
Commanders and leaders
Mohamed Boudiaf 
Ali Kafi
Liamine Zéroual
Abdelaziz Bouteflika
Mohamed Lamari
(Chief of Staff)
Mohamed Mediène
(Head of DRS)
Abassi Madani (POW)
Ali Belhadj (POW)
Abdelkader Hachani (POW
Anwar Haddam
Abdelkader Chebouti
Madani Mezrag
Mustapha Kartali
Ali Benhadjar

Abdelhak Layada (POW)
Djafar al-Afghani 
Cherif Gousmi 
Djamel Zitouni 
Antar Zouabri 


Hassan Hattab
Strength
140,000 (1994)[21]
124,000 (in 2001)
100,000–300,000 local militia fighters[1]
2,000 (1992)
40,000 (1994)
10,000 (1996)[22]
Casualties and losses
~150,000 total deaths[23]

The war has been referred to as 'the dirty war' (la sale guerre),[25] and saw extreme violence and brutality used against civilians.[26][27] Islamists targeted journalists, over 70 of whom were killed, and foreigners, over 100 of whom were killed,[28] although it is thought by many that security forces as well as Islamists were involved, as the government had infiltrated the insurgents.[29] Children were widely used, particularly by the rebel groups.[30] Total fatalities have been estimated at 44,000[31] to between 100,000 and 200,000.[32]

The conflict began in December 1991, when the new and enormously popular Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) party appeared poised to defeat the ruling National Liberation Front (FLN) party in the national parliamentary elections. The elections were canceled after the first round and the military effectively took control of the government, forcing pro-reform president Chadli Bendjedid from office. After the FIS was banned and thousands of its members arrested, Islamist guerrillas rapidly emerged and began an armed campaign against the government and its supporters.

They formed themselves into various armed groups, principally the Islamic Armed Movement (MIA), based primarily in the mountains, and the more hard-line Armed Islamic Group (GIA), based primarily in the towns. The GIA motto was "no agreement, no truce, no dialogue" and it declared war on the FIS in 1994 after the latter had made progress in negotiations with the government. The MIA and various smaller insurgent bands regrouped, becoming the FIS-loyalist Islamic Salvation Army (AIS).

After talks collapsed, elections were held in 1995 and won by the army's candidate, General Liamine Zéroual. The GIA fought the government, as well as the AIS, and began a series of massacres targeting entire neighborhoods or villages which peaked in 1997. The massacre policy caused desertion and splits in the GIA, while the AIS, under attack from both sides, declared a unilateral ceasefire with the government in 1997. In the meantime, the 1997 parliamentary elections were won by a newly created pro-Army party supporting the president.

In 1999, following the election of Abdelaziz Bouteflika as president, violence declined as large numbers of insurgents "repented", taking advantage of a new amnesty law. The remnants of the GIA proper were hunted down over the next two years, and had practically disappeared by 2002, with the exception of a splinter group called the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC),[Note 1] which announced its support for Al-Qaeda in October 2003 and continued fighting an insurgency that would eventually spread to other countries in the region.[34][35]

History

Background

Social conditions that led to dissatisfaction with the FLN government, and interest in jihad against it include: a population explosion in the 1960s and 70s that outstripped the stagnant economy's ability to supply jobs, housing, food and urban infrastructure to massive numbers of young in the urban areas;[Note 2] a collapse in the price of oil,[Note 3] whose sale supplied 95% of Algeria's exports and 60% of the government's budget;[36] a single-party state ostensibly based on socialism, anti-imperialism, and popular democracy, but ruled by high-level military and party nomenklatura from the east side of the country;[36] "corruption on a grand scale";[36] underemployed Arabic-speaking college graduates frustrated that the "Arab language fields of law and literature took a decisive back seat to the French-taught scientific fields in terms of funding and job opportunities";[38] and in response to these issues, "the most serious riots since independence" occurring in October 1988 when thousands of urban youth (known as hittistes) took control of the streets despite the killing of hundreds by security forces.[36]

Islam in Algeria after independence was dominated by Salafist "Islamic revivalism" and political Islam rather than the more apolitical popular Islam of brotherhoods found in other areas of North Africa. The brotherhoods had been dismantled by the FLN government in retaliation for lack of support and their land had been confiscated and redistributed by the FLN government after independence.[39] In the 1980s the government imported two renowned Islamic scholars, Mohammed al-Ghazali and Yusuf al-Qaradawi, to "strengthen the religious dimension" of the ruling National Liberation Front (FLN) party's "nationalist ideology". Rather than doing this, the clerics worked to promote "Islamic awakening" as they were "fellow travelers" of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf monarchies.[40] Al-Ghazali issuing a number of fatawa (Islamic judicial rulings) favorable to positions taken by local "radical" imams.[38]

Another Islamist, Mustafa Bouyali, a "gifted inflammatory preacher" and veteran of the Algerian independence struggle, called for the application of the sharia and creating of an Islamic state by jihad. After persecution by the security services in 1982 he founded the underground Mouvement Islamique Armé (MIA), "a loose association of tiny groups", with himself as amir. His group carried out a series of "bold attacks" against the regime and was able to continue its fight for five years before Bouyali was killed in February 1987.[41]

Also in the 1980s, several hundred youth left Algeria for camps of Peshawar to fight jihad in Afghanistan. As Algeria was a close ally of the jihadists enemy the Soviet Union, these jihadists tended to consider the Afghan jihad a "prelude" to jihad against the Algerian FLN state.[42] After the Marxist government in Afghanistan fell, many of the Salafist-Jihadis returned to Algeria and supported the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) and later the GIA insurgents.[42]

During and after the 1988 October Riots Islamists "set about building bridges to the young urban poor". Evidence of their effectiveness was that the riots "petered out" after meetings between the President Chadli Bendjedid and Islamists Ali Benhadj and members of the Muslim Brotherhood.[43]

The FLN government responded to the riots by amending the Algerian Constitution on 3 November 1988, to allow parties other than the ruling FLN to operate legally. A broad-based Islamist party, the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) was born shortly afterwards in Algiers on 18 February 1989, and came into legal existence in September 1989.[44] The front was led by two men. Abbassi Madani—a professor at University of Algiers and ex-independence fighter—represented a relatively moderate religious conservatism and symbolically connected the party to the Algerian War of Independence, the traditionally emphasized source of the ruling FLN's legitimacy. His aim was to "Islamise the regime without altering society's basic fabric."[43] Ali Benhadj, a charismatic preacher and high school teacher appealed to a younger and less educated class. An impassioned orator, he was known for his ability to both enrage or calm at will the tens of thousands of young hittiestes who came to hear him speak. However, his radical speeches and opposition to democratic rule alarmed non-Islamists and feminists. Neither Madani or Benhadj were committed to democracy.

In December 1989 Madani was quoted as saying:

We do not accept this democracy which permits an elected official to be in contradiction with Islam, the Shari'a, its doctrines and values.[45][46]

and in February 1989, Benhadj stated:

There is no democracy because the only source of power is Allah through the Koran, and not the people. If the people vote against the law of God, this is nothing other than blasphemy. In this case, it is necessary to kill the non-believers for the good reason that they wish to substitute their authority for that of God.[45][47][48]

The FIS made "spectacular" progress in the first year of its existence,[43] with an enormous following in the urban areas. Its doctors, nurses and rescue teams showed "devotion and effectiveness" helping victims of an earthquake in Tipaza Province;[44] its organized marches and rallies "applied steady pressure on the state" to force a promise of early elections.[44]

FIS electoral victory, 1990

Despite President Bendjedid and his party, the FLN's new liberal reforms, in the 12 June 1990 local elections—the first free elections since independence—the Algerian voters chose the FIS. The party won 54% of votes cast, almost double that of the FLN and far more than any of the other parties.[49] Its supporters were especially concentrated in urban areas.[50]

Once in power in local governments, its administration and its Islamic charity were praised by many as just, equitable, orderly and virtuous, in contrast to its corrupt, wasteful, arbitrary and inefficient FLN predecessors.[51][52] But it also alarmed the less-traditional educated French-speaking class. It imposed the veil on female municipal employees; pressured liquor stores, video shops and other un-Islamic establishments to close; and segregated bathing areas by gender.[53]

Co-leader of the FIS Ali Benhadj declared his intention in 1990, "to ban France from Algeria intellectually and ideologically, and be done, once and for all, with those whom France has nursed with her poisoned milk."[53][54]

Devout activists removed the satellite dishes of households receiving European satellite broadcast in favor of Arab satellite dishes receiving Saudi broadcasts.[55] Educationally, the party was committed to continue the Arabization of the educational system by shifting the language of instruction in more institutions, such as medical and technological schools, from French to Arabic. Large numbers of recent graduates, the first post-independence generation educated mainly in Arabic, liked this measure, as they had found the continued use of French in higher education and public life jarring and disadvantageous.[56]

In January 1991 following the start of the Gulf War, the FIS led giant demonstrations in support of Saddam Hussein and Iraq. One demonstration ended in front of the Ministry of Defense where radical leader Ali Benhadj gave an impassioned speech demanding a corp of volunteers be sent to fight for Saddam. The Algerian military took this as a direct affront to the military hierarchy and cohesion. After a project to realign electoral districts came to light in May, the FIS called for a general strike. Violence ensued and on 3 June 1991 a state of emergency was declared, many constitutional rights were suspended, and parliamentary elections postponed until December. The FIS began to lose the initiative and within a month the two leaders (Mandani and Benhadj) of the FIS were arrested and later sentenced to twelve years in prison.[56] Support for armed struggle began to develop among Bouyali's followers and veterans of the Afghan jihad and on 28 November the first act of jihad against the government occurred when a frontier post (at Guemmar) was attacked and the heads of army conscripts were cut off.[57] Despite this the FIS participated in the legislative elections and on 26 December 1991 won the first round with 118 deputies elected as opposed to just 16 for the FLN.[57] despite getting one million fewer votes than it had in 1990 elections. It appeared to be on track to win an absolute majority in the second round on 13 January 1992.

Military coup and cancellation of elections, 1992

 
  FIS plurality
  FIS majority
  non-FIS majority
  Undecided
  No data available
In the above provincial seat allocation results of the 1991 elections, the FIS attained a plurality of the votes in most of Algeria's populated areas.

The FIS had made open threats against the ruling pouvoir, condemning them as unpatriotic and pro-French, as well as financially corrupt. Additionally, FIS leadership was at best divided on the desirability of democracy, and some expressed fears that a FIS government would be, as U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Edward Djerejian put it, "one person, one vote, one time."[58]

On 11 January 1992 the army cancelled the electoral process, forcing President Bendjedid to resign and bringing in the exiled independence fighter Mohamed Boudiaf to serve as a new president. However, on 29 June 1992 he was assassinated by one of his bodyguards, Lieutenant Lambarek Boumaarafi. The assassin was sentenced to death in a closed trial in 1995. The sentence was not carried out. So many FIS members were arrested—5,000 by the army's account, 40,000 according to Gilles Kepel[59] and including its leader Abdelkader Hachani—that the jails had insufficient space to hold them in; camps were set up for them in the Sahara desert, and bearded men feared to leave their houses lest they be arrested as FIS sympathizers. The government officially dissolved the FIS on 4 March and its apparatus was dismantled.[57]

Beginning of war, 1992–93

Of the few FIS activists that remained free, many took this as a declaration of war. Throughout much of the country, remaining FIS activists, along with some Islamists too radical for FIS, took to the hills (the mountains of northern Algeria, where the forest and scrub cover were well-suited to guerrilla warfare) with whatever weapons were available and became guerrilla fighters. The very sparsely populated but oil-rich Sahara would remain mostly peaceful for almost the entire duration of the conflict. This meant that the government's principal source of foreign exchange—oil exports—was largely unaffected.[citation needed] The tense situation was compounded by the economy, which collapsed even further that year, as almost all of the longstanding subsidies on food were eliminated.

At first Algeria remained relatively calm. But in March 1993 "a steady succession of university academics, intellectuals, writer, journalist, and medical doctors were assassinated."[60] While not all were connected with the regime, they were French-speaking and so "in the eyes of the young urban poor who had joined the jihad ... associated with the hated image of French-speaking intellectuals".[60] It also "exploded" the idea of the government's triumph over the Islamists. Other attacks showed a willingness to target civilians. The bombing of the Algiers airport claimed 9 lives and injured 128 people. The FIS condemned the bombing along with the other major parties, but the FIS's influence over the guerrillas turned out to be limited.[60]

The regime began to lose control of mountain and rural districts. In working class areas of the cities insurgents expelled the police and declared "liberated Islamic zones".[60] Even the main roads of the cities passed into the hands of the insurgents.[60]

Founding of the insurgent groups

The first major armed movement to emerge, starting almost immediately after the coup, was the Islamic Armed Movement (MIA). It was led by the ex-soldier "General" Abdelkader Chebouti, a longstanding Islamist. The MIA was "well-organized and structured and favored a long-term jihad" targeting the state and its representatives and based on a guerrilla campaign like that of the War of Independence.[61] From prison, Ali Benhadj issued a fatwa giving the MIA his blessing.[61] In February 1992, ex-soldier, ex-Afghan fighter, and former FIS head of security Said Mekhloufi founded the Movement for an Islamic State (MEI).

The other main jihad group was called the Armed Islamic Group (GIA, from French Groupe Islamique Armé). In January 1993, Abdelhak Layada declared his group independent of Chebouti's. It became particularly prominent around Algiers and its suburbs, in urban environments. It took a hardline position, opposed to both the government and the FIS, affirming that "political pluralism is equivalent to sedition"[62][63] and issuing death threats against several FIS and MIA leaders. It favored a strategy of "immediate action to destabilize the enemy", by creating "an atmosphere of general insecurity" through "repeated attacks". It considered opposition to violence among some in the FIS as not only misguided but impious.[61] It was far less selective than the MIA, which insisted on ideological training; as a result, it was regularly infiltrated by the security forces, resulting in a rapid leadership turnover as successive heads were killed.

The various groups arranged several meetings to attempt to unite their forces, accepting the overall leadership of Chebouti in theory. At the last of these, at Tamesguida on 1 September, Chebouti expressed his concern about the movement's lack of discipline, in particular worrying that the Algiers airport attack, which he had not approved, could alienate supporters. The meeting was broken up by an assault from the security forces, provoking suspicions which prevented any further meetings. However the MEI merged with the GIA in May 1994.

The FIS itself established an underground network, with clandestine newspapers and even an MIA-linked radio station, and began issuing official statements from abroad starting in late 1992. However, at this stage the opinions of the guerrilla movements on the FIS were mixed; while many supported FIS, a significant faction, led by the "Afghans", regarded party political activity as inherently un-Islamic, and therefore rejected FIS statements.[citation needed]

In 1993, the divisions within the guerrilla movement became more distinct. The MIA and MEI, concentrated in the maquis, attempted to develop a military strategy against the state, typically targeting the security services and sabotaging or bombing state institutions. From its inception on, however, the GIA, concentrated in urban areas, called for and implemented the killing of anyone supporting the authorities, including government employees such as teachers and civil servants. It assassinated journalists and intellectuals (such as Tahar Djaout), saying that "The journalists who fight against Islamism through the pen will perish by the sword."[64]

It soon stepped up its attacks by targeting civilians who refused to live by their prohibitions, and in September 1993 began killing foreigners,[65] declaring that "anyone who exceeds" the GIA deadline of 30 November "will be responsible for his own sudden death."[66] 26 Foreigners were killed by the end of 1993[67] and virtually all foreigners left the country; indeed, (often illegal) Algerian emigration too rose substantially, as people sought a way out. At the same time, the number of visas granted to Algerians by other countries began to drop substantially.

Failed negotiations and guerrilla infighting, 1994

The violence continued throughout 1994, although the economy began to improve during this time; following negotiations with the IMF, the government succeeded in rescheduling debt repayments, providing it with a substantial financial windfall,[68] and further obtained some 40 billion francs from the international community to back its economic liberalization.[69] As it became obvious that the fighting would continue for some time, General Liamine Zéroual was named new president of the High Council of State; he was considered to belong to the dialoguiste (pro-negotiation) rather than éradicateur (eradicator) faction of the army.

Soon after taking office, he began negotiations with the imprisoned FIS leadership, releasing some prisoners by way of encouragement. The talks split the pro-government political spectrum. The largest political parties, especially the FLN and FFS, continued to call for compromise, while other forces—most notably the General Union of Algerian Workers (UGTA), but including smaller leftist and feminist groups such as the secularist RCD—sided with the "eradicators". A few shadowy pro-government paramilitaries, such as the Organisation of Young Free Algerians (OJAL), emerged and began attacking civilian Islamist supporters. On 10 March 1994, over 1000 (mainly Islamist) prisoners escaped Tazoult prison in what appeared to be a major coup for the guerrillas; later, conspiracy theorists would suggest that this had been staged to allow the security forces to infiltrate the GIA.

Meanwhile, under Cherif Gousmi (its leader since March), the GIA became the most high-profile guerrilla army in 1994, and achieved supremacy over the FIS.[65] In May, several Islamist leaders that were not jailed (Mohammed Said, Abderraraq Redjem), including the MEI's Said Makhloufi, joined the GIA. This was a surprise to many observers, and a blow to the FIS since the GIA had been issuing death threats against the leaders since November 1993. The move was interpreted either as the result of intra-FIS competition or as an attempt to change the GIA's course from within.[65]

FIS-loyal guerrillas, threatened with marginalization, attempted to unite their forces.[70] In July 1994,[70] the MIA, together with the remainder of the MEI and a variety of smaller groups,[citation needed] united as the Islamic Salvation Army (a term that had previously sometimes been used as a general label for pro-FIS guerrillas), declaring their allegiance to FIS. It national amir was Madani Merzag.[70] By the end of 1994, they controlled over half the guerrillas of the east and west, but barely 20% in the center, near the capital, which was where the GIA were mainly based. They issued communiqués condemning the GIA's indiscriminate targeting of women, journalists and other civilians "not involved in the repression", and attacked the GIA's school arson campaign. The AIS and FIS supported a negotiated settlement with the government/military, and the AIS's role was to strengthening FIS's hand in the negotiations.[70] The GIA was absolutely opposed to negotiations and sought instead "to purge the land of the ungodly", including the Algerian government. The two insurgent groups would soon be "locked in bloody combat."[70]

Despite the growing power of the GIA, inside the "liberated Islamic zones" of the insurgency, conditions were beginning to deteriorate. The Islamist notables, entrepreneurs, and shopkeepers had at first funded the insurgent amirs and fighters, hoping for revenge against the government that had seized power from the FIS movement they supported. But over the months the voluntary "Islamic tax" became a "full-scale extortionist racket, operated by band of armed men claiming to represent an ever more shadowy cause," who also fought each other over turf. The extortion and the fact that the zones were surrounded by the army, impoverished and victimized the pious business class which eventually fled the zones, severely weakening the Islamist cause.[65]

On 26 August, the GIA even declared a caliphate, or Islamic government, for Algeria, with Gousmi as "Commander of the Faithful".[71] However, the very next day, Said Mekhloufi announced his withdrawal from the GIA, claiming that the GIA had deviated from Islam and that this caliphate was an effort by ex-FIS leader Mohammed Said to take over the GIA. The GIA continued attacks on its usual targets, notably assassinating artists, such as Cheb Hasni, and in late August added a new practice to its activities: threatening insufficiently Islamist schools with arson.

At the end of October, the government announced the failure of its negotiations with the FIS. Instead, Zéroual embarked on a new plan: he scheduled presidential elections for 1995, while promoting "eradicationists" such as Lamari within the army and organizing "self-defense militias" in villages to fight the guerrillas. The end of 1994 saw a noticeable upsurge in violence. Over 1994, Algeria's isolation deepened; most foreign press agencies, such as Reuters, left the country this year, while the Moroccan border closed and the main foreign airlines cancelled all routes. The resulting gap in news coverage was further worsened by a government order in June banning Algerian media from reporting any terrorism-related news not covered in official press releases.[72]

A few FIS leaders, notably Rabah Kebir, had escaped into exile abroad. Upon the invitation of the Rome-based Community of Sant'Egidio, in November 1994, they began negotiations in Rome with other opposition parties, both Islamist and secular (FLN, FFS, FIS, MDA, PT, JMC). They came out with a mutual agreement on 14 January 1995: the Sant'Egidio platform. This presented a set of principles: respect for human rights and multi-party democracy, rejection of army rule and dictatorship, recognition of Islam, Arab and Berber ethnic identity as essential aspects of Algeria's national identity, demand for the release of FIS leaders, and an end to extrajudicial killing and torture on all sides.

To the surprise of many, even Ali Belhadj endorsed the agreement, which meant that the FIS had returned into the legal framework, along with the other opposition parties. The initiative was also received favorably by "influential circles" in the United States. However, for the agreement to work, the FIS still had to have the support of its original power base, when in fact the pious bourgeous had abandon it for the collaborationist Hamas party and the urban poor for jihad;[73] and the other side, the government, had to be interested in the agreement. Those two features being lacking, the platform's effect was at best limited – though some argue that, in the words of Andrea Riccardi who brokered the negotiations for the Community of Sant'Egidio, "the platform made the Algerian military leave the cage of a solely military confrontation and forced them to react with a political act", the 1995 presidential elections. The next few months saw the killing of some 100 Islamist prisoners in the Serkadji prison mutiny, and a major success for the security forces in battle at Ain Defla, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of guerrilla fighters.

Cherif Gousmi was eventually succeeded by Djamel Zitouni as GIA head. Zitouni extended the GIA's attacks on civilians to French soil, beginning with the hijacking of Air France Flight 8969 at the end of December 1994 and continuing with several bombings and attempted bombings throughout 1995. It is thought Zitouni hoped to undermine the FIS by proving its irrelevance to the outcome of the war,[74] and to induce the French government to withdraw support from the Algerian government to put a stop to the terrorism.[75] But by eliminating the FIS as a factor the campaign also suggested to outsiders in America and Europe that the "only force capable of stopping the terrorists" was the Algerian government.[74] In any case, in France the GIA attacks created a backlash of fear of young Muslim immigrants joining the campaign.[75] The campaign was a major fault line dividing the insurgents. The GIA "exalted in the enthusiasm of the disinherited" poor young Algerian men every time "the former colonial power" was attacked, while the FIS leaders abroad struggled to persuade "the governments of Europe and the United States" that Islamic FIS government would "guarantee social order and expand the market economy" in Algeria.[76]

In Algeria itself, attacks continued, with car bombs and assassinations of musicians, sportsmen, and unveiled women, as well as police and soldiers. Even at this stage, the seemingly counterproductive nature of many of its attacks led to speculation (encouraged by FIS members abroad whose importance was undermined by GIA hostility to negotiation) that the group had been infiltrated by Algerian secret services. The region south of Algiers, in particular, came to be dominated by the GIA, who called it the "liberated zone". Later, it would come to be known as the "Triangle of Death".

Reports of battles between the AIS and GIA increased, and the GIA reiterated its death threats against FIS and AIS leaders, assassinating a co-founder of the FIS, Abdelbaki Sahraoui, in Paris. At this point, foreign sources estimated the total number of guerrillas to be about 27,000.

Politics resume, militias emerge, 1995–96

Following the breakdown of negotiations with the FIS, the government decided to hold presidential elections. On 16 November 1995, former head of ground forces of the Algerian military Liamine Zéroual was elected president with 60% of votes cast in an election contested by many candidates. The results reflected various popular opinions, ranging from support for secularism and opposition to Islamism to a desire for an end to the violence, regardless of politics. The FIS had urged Algerians to boycott the election and the GIA threatened to kill anyone who voted (using the slogan "one vote, one bullet"), but turnout was relatively high among the pious middle class who had formerly supported the FIS but become disillusioned by the "endless violence and racketeering by gangs of young men in the name of jihad."[76] and turned out for Islamists Mahfoud Nahnah (25%) and Noureddine Boukrouh.[77] Hopes grew that Algerian politics would finally be normalized. Zéroual followed this up by pushing through a new constitution in 1996, substantially strengthening the power of the President and adding a second house that would be partly elected and partly appointed by the President. In November 1996, the text was passed by a national referendum; while the official turnout rate was 80%, this vote was unmonitored, and the claimed high turnout was considered by most to be implausible.

The election results were a setback for the armed groups, who saw a significant increase in desertions immediately following the elections. The FIS' Rabah Kebir responded to the apparent shift in popular mood by adopting a more conciliatory tone towards the government, but was condemned by some parts of the party and of the AIS. The GIA was shaken by internal dissension; shortly after the election, its leadership killed the FIS leaders who had joined the GIA, accusing them of attempting a takeover. This purge accelerated the disintegration of the GIA: Mustapha Kartali, Ali Benhadjar and Hassan Hattab's factions all refused to recognize Zitouni's leadership starting around late 1995, although they would not formally break away until later. In December, the GIA killed the AIS leader for central Algeria, Azzedine Baa, and in January pledged to fight the AIS as an enemy; particularly in the west, full-scale battles between them became common.

The Government's political moves were combined with a substantial increase in the pro-Government militias' profile. "Self-defense militias", often called "Patriots" for short, consisting of trusted local citizens trained and armed by the army, were founded in towns near areas where guerrillas were active, and were promoted on national TV. The program was received well in some parts of the country, but was less popular in others; it would be substantially increased over the next few years, particularly after the massacres of 1997.

Massacres and reconciliation, 1996–97

 
Massacres of over 50 people in the years 1997 and 1998

In July 1996 GIA leader, Djamel Zitouni was killed by one of the breakaway ex-GIA factions and was succeeded by Antar Zouabri, who would prove an even bloodier leader.

1997 elections

Parliamentary elections were held on 5 June 1997. They were dominated by the National Democratic Rally (RND), a new party created in early 1997 for Zéroual's supporters, which got 156 out of 380 seats, followed mainly by the MSP (as Hamas had been required to rename itself) and the FLN at over 60 seats each. Views on this election were mixed; most major opposition parties filed complaints, and that a party (RND) founded only a few months earlier and which had never taken part in any election before should win more votes than any other seemed implausible to observers.[citation needed] The RND, FLN and MSP formed a coalition government, with the RND's Ahmed Ouyahia as prime minister. There were hints of a softening towards FIS: Abdelkader Hachani was released, and Abbassi Madani moved to house arrest.

Village massacres

At this point, however, a new and vital problem emerged. Starting around April (the Thalit massacre), Algeria was wracked by massacres of intense brutality and unprecedented size; previous massacres had occurred in the conflict, but always on a substantially smaller scale. Typically targeting entire villages or neighborhoods and disregarding the age and sex of victims, killing tens, and sometimes hundreds, of civilians at a time.

These massacres continued through the end of 1998, changing the nature of the political situation considerably. The areas south and east of Algiers, which had voted strongly for FIS in 1991, were hit particularly hard; the Rais and Bentalha massacres in particular shocked worldwide observers. Pregnant women were sliced open, children were hacked to pieces or dashed against walls, men's limbs were hacked off one by one, and, as the attackers retreated, they would kidnap young women to keep as sex slaves. Although this quotation by Nesroullah Yous, a survivor of Bentalha, may be an exaggeration, it expresses the apparent mood of the attackers:

We have the whole night to rape your women and children, drink your blood. Even if you escape today, we'll come back tomorrow to finish you off! We're here to send you to your God![78]

Dispute over responsibility

The GIA's responsibility for these massacres remains disputed. In a communique its amir Antar Zouabri claimed credit for both Rais and Bentalha, calling the killings an "offering to God" and declaring impious the victims and all Algerians who had not joined its ranks.[79] By declaring that "except for those who are with us, all others are apostates and deserving of death,"[80] it had adopted a takfirist ideology. In some cases, it has been suggested that the GIA were motivated to commit a massacre by a village's joining the Patriot program, which they saw as evidence of disloyalty; in others, that rivalry with other groups (e.g., Mustapha Kartali's breakaway faction) played a part. Its policy of massacring civilians was cited by the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat as one of the main reasons it split off from the GIA.

However, according to reports by Amnesty International[81] and Human Rights Watch[82] army barracks were stationed within a few hundred meters of the villages, yet did nothing to stop the killings. At about the same time, a number of people claiming to be defectors from the Algerian security services (such as Habib Souaidia), having fled to Western countries, alleged that the security services had themselves committed some of the massacres.[83][84][85][86][page needed][Note 4] These and other details raised suspicions that the state was in some way collaborating with, or even controlling parts of, the GIA (particularly through infiltration by the secret services) – a theory popularised by Nesroullah Yous, and FIS itself.[88] This suggestion provoked furious reactions from some quarters in Algeria, and has been rejected by many researchers,[Note 5] though others regard it as plausible. [Note 6]

In contrast, Algerians such as Zazi Sadou, have collected testimonies by survivors that their attackers were unmasked and were recognised as local radicals – in one case even an elected member of the FIS.[Note 7] Roger Kaplan, writing in The Atlantic Monthly, dismissed insinuations of Government involvement in the massacres;[Note 8] However, as Youcef Bouandel notes; "Regardless of the explanations one may have regarding the violence, the authorities' credibility has been tarnished by its non-assistance to endangered civilian villagers being massacred in the vicinity of military barracks. "[93] Another explanation is the "deeply ingrained" tradition of "purposeful accumulation of wealth and status by means of violence",[94] outweighing any basic national identity with feelings of solidarity, loyalty, for what was a province of the Ottoman Empire for much of its history.

AIS unilateral truce

The AIS, which at this point was engaged in an all-out war with the GIA as well as the Government, found itself in an untenable position. The GIA seemed a more immediately pressing enemy, and AIS members expressed fears that the massacres—which it had condemned more than once—would be blamed on them. On 21 September 1997, the AIS' head, Madani Mezrag, ordered a unilateral and unconditional ceasefire starting 1 October, in order to "unveil the enemy that hides behind these abominable massacres." The AIS thus largely took itself out of the political equation, reducing the fighting to a struggle between the Government, the GIA, and the various splinter groups that were increasingly breaking away from the GIA. Ali Benhadjar's FIS-loyalist Islamic League for Da'wa and Jihad (LIDD), formed in February 1997, allied itself with the AIS and observed the same ceasefire. Over the next three years, the AIS would gradually negotiate an amnesty for its members.

GIA destroyed, 1998–2000

After receiving much international pressure to act, the EU sent two delegations, one of them led by Mário Soares, to visit Algeria and investigate the massacres in the first half of 1998; their reports condemned the Islamist armed groups.

The GIA's policy of massacring civilians had already caused a split among its commanders, with some rejecting the policy; on 14 September 1998, this disagreement was formalized with the formation of the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), based in the mountains west of Kabylie and led by Hassan Hattab. Massacres continued throughout 1998 attributed to "armed groups that had formerly belonged to the GIA", some engaged in banditry, other settling scores with the patriots or others, some enlisting in the services of landowners to frighten illegal occupants away.[95] Eventually towns soon became safer, although massacres continued in rural areas.[citation needed]

On 11 September, President Zéroual surprised observers by announcing his resignation. New elections were arranged, and on 15 April 1999, the army-backed ex-independence-fighter Abdelaziz Bouteflika was elected president with, according to the authorities, 74% of the votes. All the other candidates had withdrawn from the election shortly before, citing fraud concerns. Bouteflika continued negotiations with the AIS, and on 5 June the AIS agreed, in principle, to disband. Bouteflika followed up this success for the Government by pardoning a number of Islamist prisoners convicted of minor offenses and pushing the Civil Harmony Act through Parliament, a law allowing Islamist fighters not guilty of murder or rape to escape all prosecution if they turn themselves in.[citation needed]

This law was finally approved by referendum on 16 September 1999, and a number of fighters, including Mustapha Kartali, took advantage of it to give themselves up and resume normal life—sometimes angering those who had suffered at the hands of the guerrillas. FIS leadership expressed dissatisfaction with the results, feeling that the AIS had stopped fighting without solving any of the issues; but their main voice outside of prison, Abdelkader Hachani, was assassinated on 22 November. Violence declined, though not stopping altogether, and a sense of normality started returning to Algeria.[citation needed]

The AIS fully disbanded after 11 January 2000, having negotiated a special amnesty with the Government. The GIA, torn by splits and desertions and denounced by all sides even in the Islamist movement, was slowly destroyed by army operations over the next few years; by the time of Antar Zouabri's death in early 2002, it was effectively incapacitated. The Government's efforts were given a boost in the aftermath of 11 September 2001 attacks; United States sympathy for Algeria's government increased, and was expressed concretely through such actions as the freezing of GIA and GSPC assets and the supply of infrared goggles to the army.[citation needed]

GSPC continues

With the GIA's decline, the GSPC was left as the most active rebel group, with about 300 fighters in 2003.[96] It continued a campaign of assassinations of police and army personnel in its area, and also managed to expand into the Sahara, broadening the conflict into the insurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present). Its southern division, led by Amari Saifi (nicknamed "Abderrezak el-Para", the "paratrooper"), kidnapped a number of German tourists in 2003, before being forced to flee to sparsely populated areas of Mali, and later Niger and Chad, where he was captured. By late 2003, the group's founder had been supplanted by the even more radical Nabil Sahraoui, who announced his open support for al-Qaeda, thus strengthening government ties between the U.S. and Algeria. He was reportedly killed shortly afterwards, and was succeeded by Abou Mossaab Abdelouadoud in 2004.[97]

2004 presidential election and amnesty

The release of FIS leaders Madani and Belhadj in 2003 had no observable effect on the situation, illustrating a newfound governmental confidence which would be deepened by the 2004 presidential election, in which Bouteflika was reelected by 85% with support from two major parties and one faction of the third major party. The vote was seen as confirming strong popular support for Bouteflika's policy towards the guerrillas and the successful termination of large-scale violence.[citation needed]

In September 2005 a national referendum was held on an amnesty proposal by Bouteflika's government, similar to the 1999 law, to end legal proceedings against individuals who were no longer fighting, and to provide compensation to families of people killed by Government forces. The controversial Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation was declared to have won with 97% support, and with 80% of participation.[98] The conditions of the campaign in Algeria were criticized in the French press, in particular in Le Monde and L'Humanité.[citation needed]

Lawyer Ali Merabet, for example, founder of Somoud, an NGO which represents the families of the disappeared, was opposed to the Charter which would "force the victims to grant forgiveness". He remains doubtful that the time of the FIS has truly ended and notes that while people no longer support them, the project of the FIS – which he denies is Islamic – still exists and remains a threat.[99]

The proposal was implemented by Presidential decree in February 2006, and adopted on 29 September 2006. Particularly controversial was its provision of immunity against prosecution to surrendered ex-guerrillas (for all but the worst crimes) and Army personnel (for any action "safeguarding the nation".)[100] According to Algerian paper El Khabar, over 400 GSPC guerrillas surrendered under its terms.[101] Estimates of the rebels size in 2005 ranged from 300 to 1000.[102] The International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH) has opposed the amnesty.[103]

While the fighting died down a state of emergency remained in place,[104] only being lifted in February 2011 due to renewed protests amidst the ongoing Arab Spring.

Death toll

Bouteflika said in 1999 that 100,000 people had died by that time and in a speech on 25 February 2005, spoke of a round figure of 150,000 people killed in the war.[102] Fouad Ajami argues the toll could be as high as 200,000, and that it is in the government's interest to minimize casualties.[32] These figures, not broken down into government forces, insurgents and civilians, are commonly cited as the war's death toll. However this estimate may be too high. A 2008 study found about 26,000 people killed, through combat operations, massacres, bombings and assassinations, alongside 18,000 people, 'disappeared' and presumed killed in secret. This would give a total death toll of around 44,000 people.[31] This is out of a population of about 25,010,000 in 1990 and 31,193,917 in 2000.[31][105]

Use of children

Throughout the war children were recruited frequently by the armed groups fighting the government.[30] A government-allied militia—the Legitimate Defence Groups (LDG)—also used children, according to some reports.[30][106] Although the rules for joining the LDG were the same as the army, in which only adults were recruited (by conscription) the LDG applied no safeguards to ensure that children could not join up.[106] The extent of child recruitment during the war remains unknown.[106]

Analysis and impact

Factors that prevented Algeria from following in the path of Saudi Arabia and Iran into an Islamic state include minority groups (army rank and file, veterans of the War of Independence, the secular middle class) that threw their support with the government, and Islamist supporters that lost faith with the Salafi Jihadis. Unlike in Iran, the army rank and file stayed on the side of the government. Veterans of the War of Independence known as the "revolutionary family" felt its privileges directly tied to the government and supported the regime. Also unlike in Iran, the secular middle class remained firmly in support of the government. Branded as "sons of France" by the jihadis, they feared an Islamist takeover far more than they hated the corruption and ineptitude of the FLN government.[107] The part of the middle class who supported the FIS supported the jihad against the government at first. However, living in GIA-controlled areas, cut off by the security forces, they suffered from extortion from less-than-disciplined young jihadis demanding "Zakat". Business owners abandoned the GIA to support first the AIS and eventually the government-approved Islamist Hamas or Movement of Society for Peace party.[65] The young urban poor themselves whose 1988 October Riots had initiated reforms and put an end to one-party rule, was "crushed as a political factor".[108]

At least at first, the "unspeakable atrocities" and enormous loss of life on behalf of a military defeat "drastically weakened Islamism as a whole" throughout the Muslim world, and led to much time and energy being spent by Islamists distancing themselves from extremism.[109] In Algeria the war left the public "with a deep fear of instability" according to Algerian journalist Kamel Daoud. The country was one of the few in the Arab world not to participate in the Arab Spring.[110]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Hassan Hattab's GSPC which has condemned the GIA's indiscriminate attacks on civilians and, since going it alone, has tended to revert to the classic MIA-AIS strategy of confining its attacks to guerrilla forces."[33]
  2. ^ In 1989, 40 percent of Algeria's population of 24 million were under 15 years of age; the urban population was in excess of 50 percent of the total population; the birthrate was 3.1% per year[36]
  3. ^ price fell from over US$35 per barrel in 1980 to below $10 in 1986 (prices not adjusted for inflation)[37]
  4. ^ "'When I enlisted into the Algerian army in 1989, I was miles away from thinking that I would be a witness to the tragedy that has struck my country. I have seen colleagues burn alive a 15-year-old child. I have seen soldiers disguising themselves as terrorists and massacring civilians."[87]
  5. ^ "Still, there is substantial evidence that many among the deadliest massacres have been perpetrated by Islamist guerrillas. The most important evidence comes from testimonies of survivors who were able to identify local Islamists among the attackers (see below). In fact, survivors who openly accuse the army for its failure to intervene also expressed no doubt about the identity of the killers, pointing to the Islamist guerrillas (e.g. Tuquoi, J.-P. 1997. 'Algérie, Autopsie d'un Massacre.' Le Monde 11 November). Moreover, some of the troubling aspects of this story can be explained without reference to an army conspiracy. For example, in civil wars prisoners tend to be killed on the spot rather than taken prisoner (Laqueur, W. 1998. Guerrilla Warfare: A Historical and Critical Study. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction). Militiamen, the most likely to capture guerrillas, have openly stated that they took no prisoners (Amnesty International. 1997b. Algeria: Civilian Population Caught in a Spiral of Violence. Report MDE 28/23/97. p.17). Journalists working in the field have found credible testimonies in support of the thesis that most massacres are organized by the rebels (Leclère, T. 1997. 'Raïs, Retour sur un Massacre.' Télérama 22 October; Tuquoi 1997 among others). European foreign ministries believe that it is Islamist guerrillas who are responsible for the massacres (Observer 9 February 1998). Although, it is impossible to know the full truth at this point (see Charef, A. 1998. Algérie: Autopsie d'un massacre. Paris: L'Aube.), the assumption that many massacres were committed by the Islamist guerrillas seems plausible and is widely adopted by area experts (Addi, L. 1998. 'Algeria's Army, Algeria's Agony.' Foreign Affairs (July–August), p.44) and other authors (Smith, B. 1998. 'Algeria: The Horror.' The New York Review of Books XLV 7: p.27). Likewise, the reluctance of the army to intervene and stop some of these massacres is also beyond doubt."[89]
  6. ^ "Under Zouabri, the extremism and violence of the GIA became completely indiscriminate, leading to the horrific massacres of 1997 and 1998 – although, once again, great care must be exercised over these incidents as it is quite clear that the greatest beneficiary from them was the Algerian state. There is considerable indirect evidence of state involvement and some direct evidence as well, which is discussed below."[90]
  7. ^ "Some fundamentalist leaders have attempted to distance themselves from these massacres and claimed that the State was behind them or that they were the work of the State-armed self-defense groups. Some human rights groups have echoed this claim to some extent. Inside Algeria, and particularly among survivors of the communities attacked, the view is sharply different. In many cases, survivors have identified their attackers as the assailants enter the villages unmasked and are often from the locality. In one case, a survivor identified a former elected FIS officials as one of the perpetrators of a massacre. Testimonies Collected by Zazi Sadou."[91]
  8. ^ "To people who had been watching Algeria's evolution, the assumption that sinister complicities within the Algerian state were involved in the assassinations and massacres was libelous. I thought of Khalida Messaoudi, a forty-year-old former teacher and political activist who went into hiding after being sentenced to die by those who shared the ideology of the killers who descended on Had T'Chekala. Among democratic, human rights, and feminist organizations very few have expressed support for Messaoudi. In the United States only the American Federation of Teachers has recognized her struggle for human rights. She was condemned for being an impious, Zionist (she is a nonpracticing Muslim), loose, radical woman, and thousands of women in Algeria have been killed for much less. Sixteen-year-old girls, for instance, have been dragged out of classrooms and slaughtered in school yards like sheep because the killers decreed that nubile girls should not be in school. This was the context and the background and the reality. And now, when the world paid attention, it was to suggest the involvement of Government death squads."[92]

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Bibliography

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  • Michael Willis (1996). The Islamist Challenge in Algeria: A Political History. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-9328-2.

Further reading

  • M. Al-Ahnaf; B. Botiveau; F. Fregosi (1991). L'Algerie par ses islamistes. Paris: Karthala. ISBN 978-2-86537-318-5.
  • Marco Impagliazzo; Mario Giro (1997). Algeria in ostaggio. Milano: Guerini e Associati.

External links

  • On the secret war in Algeria and French machinations
  • presented by the &
  • , ICG Middle East Report No. 29 (registration required)
  • Chronologie d’une tragédie cachée, a timeline
  • Le mouvement islamiste algerien, Salima Mellah

algerian, civil, confused, with, algerian, arabic, ال, ال, الج, ائ, romanized, Ḥarb, ʾahlīyah, jazāʾirīyah, civil, algeria, fought, between, algerian, government, various, islamist, rebel, groups, from, december, 1991, following, coup, negating, islamist, elec. Not to be confused with Algerian War The Algerian Civil War Arabic ال ح ر ب ال أ ه ل ي ة الج ز ائ ر ي ة romanized al Ḥarb al ʾAhliyah al Jazaʾiriyah was a civil war in Algeria fought between the Algerian government and various Islamist rebel groups from 26 December 1991 following a coup negating an Islamist electoral victory to 8 February 2002 The war began slowly as it initially appeared the government had successfully crushed the Islamist movement but armed groups emerged to declare jihad and by 1994 violence had reached such a level that it appeared the government might not be able to withstand it 24 By 1996 97 it had become clear that the Islamist resistance had lost its popular support although fighting continued for several years after 24 Algerian Civil WarMilitary deployed in the streets of Algiers after the military coup against the Islamists 12 January 1992 Date26 December 1991 8 February 2002 18 10 years 1 month 1 week and 6 days LocationAlgeriaResultGovernment victory FIS victory in 1991 election cancelled by military coup formation of FIS loyalist guerrillas GIA radicals declare war on FIS in 1994 after negotiations with government Spillover to France with Air France Flight 8969 amp 1995 France bombings 19 AIS FIS declare unilateral ceasefire in 1997 as a result of GIA s massacres of civilians Civil war subsided after government amnesty peace plan in 2000 20 GIA largely ceased to exist by 2002 a dissident insurgency continuedBelligerents Government of Algeria ANP Local militias 1 DRS FLN RND from 1997 Rally for Culture and Democracy Socialist Forces Front General Union of Algerian Workers MSI Hamas MRI Nahda OJAL mid 1990s Supported by Tunisia 2 3 European Union 4 France 3 4 Egypt 2 3 South Africa 5 6 FIS loyalists AIS 1994 99 MIA until 1994 MEI until 1994 FIDA until 1996 MIPD 1996 97 LIDD 1997 Supported by Libya until 1995 3 Morocco alleged 3 7 8 Saudi Arabia pre war 4 Iran alleged 4 Saudi private donors 4 GIA from 1993 Afghan Arabs 9 Takfir wal HijraSupported by Sudan alleged 10 11 12 Iran alleged 10 11 12 Finsbury Park Mosque 13 14 Brandbergen Mosque 15 16 EIJ until 1995 17 GSPC from 1998 Supported by Al Qaeda 10 Commanders and leadersMohamed Boudiaf Ali Kafi Liamine Zeroual Abdelaziz Bouteflika Mohamed Lamari Chief of Staff Mohamed Mediene Head of DRS Abassi Madani POW Ali Belhadj POW Abdelkader Hachani POW Anwar HaddamAbdelkader CheboutiMadani MezragMustapha KartaliAli BenhadjarAbdelhak Layada POW Djafar al Afghani Cherif Gousmi Djamel Zitouni Antar Zouabri Hassan HattabStrength140 000 1994 21 124 000 in 2001 100 000 300 000 local militia fighters 1 2 000 1992 40 000 1994 10 000 1996 22 Casualties and losses 150 000 total deaths 23 The war has been referred to as the dirty war la sale guerre 25 and saw extreme violence and brutality used against civilians 26 27 Islamists targeted journalists over 70 of whom were killed and foreigners over 100 of whom were killed 28 although it is thought by many that security forces as well as Islamists were involved as the government had infiltrated the insurgents 29 Children were widely used particularly by the rebel groups 30 Total fatalities have been estimated at 44 000 31 to between 100 000 and 200 000 32 The conflict began in December 1991 when the new and enormously popular Islamic Salvation Front FIS party appeared poised to defeat the ruling National Liberation Front FLN party in the national parliamentary elections The elections were canceled after the first round and the military effectively took control of the government forcing pro reform president Chadli Bendjedid from office After the FIS was banned and thousands of its members arrested Islamist guerrillas rapidly emerged and began an armed campaign against the government and its supporters They formed themselves into various armed groups principally the Islamic Armed Movement MIA based primarily in the mountains and the more hard line Armed Islamic Group GIA based primarily in the towns The GIA motto was no agreement no truce no dialogue and it declared war on the FIS in 1994 after the latter had made progress in negotiations with the government The MIA and various smaller insurgent bands regrouped becoming the FIS loyalist Islamic Salvation Army AIS After talks collapsed elections were held in 1995 and won by the army s candidate General Liamine Zeroual The GIA fought the government as well as the AIS and began a series of massacres targeting entire neighborhoods or villages which peaked in 1997 The massacre policy caused desertion and splits in the GIA while the AIS under attack from both sides declared a unilateral ceasefire with the government in 1997 In the meantime the 1997 parliamentary elections were won by a newly created pro Army party supporting the president In 1999 following the election of Abdelaziz Bouteflika as president violence declined as large numbers of insurgents repented taking advantage of a new amnesty law The remnants of the GIA proper were hunted down over the next two years and had practically disappeared by 2002 with the exception of a splinter group called the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat GSPC Note 1 which announced its support for Al Qaeda in October 2003 and continued fighting an insurgency that would eventually spread to other countries in the region 34 35 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 1 1 FIS electoral victory 1990 1 1 2 Military coup and cancellation of elections 1992 1 2 Beginning of war 1992 93 1 2 1 Founding of the insurgent groups 1 3 Failed negotiations and guerrilla infighting 1994 1 4 Politics resume militias emerge 1995 96 1 5 Massacres and reconciliation 1996 97 1 5 1 1997 elections 1 5 2 Village massacres 1 5 3 Dispute over responsibility 1 5 4 AIS unilateral truce 1 6 GIA destroyed 1998 2000 1 7 GSPC continues 1 8 2004 presidential election and amnesty 2 Death toll 3 Use of children 4 Analysis and impact 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditBackground Edit Social conditions that led to dissatisfaction with the FLN government and interest in jihad against it include a population explosion in the 1960s and 70s that outstripped the stagnant economy s ability to supply jobs housing food and urban infrastructure to massive numbers of young in the urban areas Note 2 a collapse in the price of oil Note 3 whose sale supplied 95 of Algeria s exports and 60 of the government s budget 36 a single party state ostensibly based on socialism anti imperialism and popular democracy but ruled by high level military and party nomenklatura from the east side of the country 36 corruption on a grand scale 36 underemployed Arabic speaking college graduates frustrated that the Arab language fields of law and literature took a decisive back seat to the French taught scientific fields in terms of funding and job opportunities 38 and in response to these issues the most serious riots since independence occurring in October 1988 when thousands of urban youth known as hittistes took control of the streets despite the killing of hundreds by security forces 36 Islam in Algeria after independence was dominated by Salafist Islamic revivalism and political Islam rather than the more apolitical popular Islam of brotherhoods found in other areas of North Africa The brotherhoods had been dismantled by the FLN government in retaliation for lack of support and their land had been confiscated and redistributed by the FLN government after independence 39 In the 1980s the government imported two renowned Islamic scholars Mohammed al Ghazali and Yusuf al Qaradawi to strengthen the religious dimension of the ruling National Liberation Front FLN party s nationalist ideology Rather than doing this the clerics worked to promote Islamic awakening as they were fellow travelers of the Muslim Brotherhood and supporters of Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf monarchies 40 Al Ghazali issuing a number of fatawa Islamic judicial rulings favorable to positions taken by local radical imams 38 Another Islamist Mustafa Bouyali a gifted inflammatory preacher and veteran of the Algerian independence struggle called for the application of the sharia and creating of an Islamic state by jihad After persecution by the security services in 1982 he founded the underground Mouvement Islamique Arme MIA a loose association of tiny groups with himself as amir His group carried out a series of bold attacks against the regime and was able to continue its fight for five years before Bouyali was killed in February 1987 41 Also in the 1980s several hundred youth left Algeria for camps of Peshawar to fight jihad in Afghanistan As Algeria was a close ally of the jihadists enemy the Soviet Union these jihadists tended to consider the Afghan jihad a prelude to jihad against the Algerian FLN state 42 After the Marxist government in Afghanistan fell many of the Salafist Jihadis returned to Algeria and supported the Islamic Salvation Front FIS and later the GIA insurgents 42 During and after the 1988 October Riots Islamists set about building bridges to the young urban poor Evidence of their effectiveness was that the riots petered out after meetings between the President Chadli Bendjedid and Islamists Ali Benhadj and members of the Muslim Brotherhood 43 The FLN government responded to the riots by amending the Algerian Constitution on 3 November 1988 to allow parties other than the ruling FLN to operate legally A broad based Islamist party the Islamic Salvation Front FIS was born shortly afterwards in Algiers on 18 February 1989 and came into legal existence in September 1989 44 The front was led by two men Abbassi Madani a professor at University of Algiers and ex independence fighter represented a relatively moderate religious conservatism and symbolically connected the party to the Algerian War of Independence the traditionally emphasized source of the ruling FLN s legitimacy His aim was to Islamise the regime without altering society s basic fabric 43 Ali Benhadj a charismatic preacher and high school teacher appealed to a younger and less educated class An impassioned orator he was known for his ability to both enrage or calm at will the tens of thousands of young hittiestes who came to hear him speak However his radical speeches and opposition to democratic rule alarmed non Islamists and feminists Neither Madani or Benhadj were committed to democracy In December 1989 Madani was quoted as saying We do not accept this democracy which permits an elected official to be in contradiction with Islam the Shari a its doctrines and values 45 46 and in February 1989 Benhadj stated There is no democracy because the only source of power is Allah through the Koran and not the people If the people vote against the law of God this is nothing other than blasphemy In this case it is necessary to kill the non believers for the good reason that they wish to substitute their authority for that of God 45 47 48 The FIS made spectacular progress in the first year of its existence 43 with an enormous following in the urban areas Its doctors nurses and rescue teams showed devotion and effectiveness helping victims of an earthquake in Tipaza Province 44 its organized marches and rallies applied steady pressure on the state to force a promise of early elections 44 FIS electoral victory 1990 Edit Despite President Bendjedid and his party the FLN s new liberal reforms in the 12 June 1990 local elections the first free elections since independence the Algerian voters chose the FIS The party won 54 of votes cast almost double that of the FLN and far more than any of the other parties 49 Its supporters were especially concentrated in urban areas 50 Once in power in local governments its administration and its Islamic charity were praised by many as just equitable orderly and virtuous in contrast to its corrupt wasteful arbitrary and inefficient FLN predecessors 51 52 But it also alarmed the less traditional educated French speaking class It imposed the veil on female municipal employees pressured liquor stores video shops and other un Islamic establishments to close and segregated bathing areas by gender 53 Co leader of the FIS Ali Benhadj declared his intention in 1990 to ban France from Algeria intellectually and ideologically and be done once and for all with those whom France has nursed with her poisoned milk 53 54 Devout activists removed the satellite dishes of households receiving European satellite broadcast in favor of Arab satellite dishes receiving Saudi broadcasts 55 Educationally the party was committed to continue the Arabization of the educational system by shifting the language of instruction in more institutions such as medical and technological schools from French to Arabic Large numbers of recent graduates the first post independence generation educated mainly in Arabic liked this measure as they had found the continued use of French in higher education and public life jarring and disadvantageous 56 In January 1991 following the start of the Gulf War the FIS led giant demonstrations in support of Saddam Hussein and Iraq One demonstration ended in front of the Ministry of Defense where radical leader Ali Benhadj gave an impassioned speech demanding a corp of volunteers be sent to fight for Saddam The Algerian military took this as a direct affront to the military hierarchy and cohesion After a project to realign electoral districts came to light in May the FIS called for a general strike Violence ensued and on 3 June 1991 a state of emergency was declared many constitutional rights were suspended and parliamentary elections postponed until December The FIS began to lose the initiative and within a month the two leaders Mandani and Benhadj of the FIS were arrested and later sentenced to twelve years in prison 56 Support for armed struggle began to develop among Bouyali s followers and veterans of the Afghan jihad and on 28 November the first act of jihad against the government occurred when a frontier post at Guemmar was attacked and the heads of army conscripts were cut off 57 Despite this the FIS participated in the legislative elections and on 26 December 1991 won the first round with 118 deputies elected as opposed to just 16 for the FLN 57 despite getting one million fewer votes than it had in 1990 elections It appeared to be on track to win an absolute majority in the second round on 13 January 1992 Military coup and cancellation of elections 1992 Edit FIS plurality FIS majority non FIS majority Undecided No data availableIn the above provincial seat allocation results of the 1991 elections the FIS attained a plurality of the votes in most of Algeria s populated areas The FIS had made open threats against the ruling pouvoir condemning them as unpatriotic and pro French as well as financially corrupt Additionally FIS leadership was at best divided on the desirability of democracy and some expressed fears that a FIS government would be as U S Assistant Secretary of State Edward Djerejian put it one person one vote one time 58 On 11 January 1992 the army cancelled the electoral process forcing President Bendjedid to resign and bringing in the exiled independence fighter Mohamed Boudiaf to serve as a new president However on 29 June 1992 he was assassinated by one of his bodyguards Lieutenant Lambarek Boumaarafi The assassin was sentenced to death in a closed trial in 1995 The sentence was not carried out So many FIS members were arrested 5 000 by the army s account 40 000 according to Gilles Kepel 59 and including its leader Abdelkader Hachani that the jails had insufficient space to hold them in camps were set up for them in the Sahara desert and bearded men feared to leave their houses lest they be arrested as FIS sympathizers The government officially dissolved the FIS on 4 March and its apparatus was dismantled 57 Beginning of war 1992 93 Edit Of the few FIS activists that remained free many took this as a declaration of war Throughout much of the country remaining FIS activists along with some Islamists too radical for FIS took to the hills the mountains of northern Algeria where the forest and scrub cover were well suited to guerrilla warfare with whatever weapons were available and became guerrilla fighters The very sparsely populated but oil rich Sahara would remain mostly peaceful for almost the entire duration of the conflict This meant that the government s principal source of foreign exchange oil exports was largely unaffected citation needed The tense situation was compounded by the economy which collapsed even further that year as almost all of the longstanding subsidies on food were eliminated At first Algeria remained relatively calm But in March 1993 a steady succession of university academics intellectuals writer journalist and medical doctors were assassinated 60 While not all were connected with the regime they were French speaking and so in the eyes of the young urban poor who had joined the jihad associated with the hated image of French speaking intellectuals 60 It also exploded the idea of the government s triumph over the Islamists Other attacks showed a willingness to target civilians The bombing of the Algiers airport claimed 9 lives and injured 128 people The FIS condemned the bombing along with the other major parties but the FIS s influence over the guerrillas turned out to be limited 60 The regime began to lose control of mountain and rural districts In working class areas of the cities insurgents expelled the police and declared liberated Islamic zones 60 Even the main roads of the cities passed into the hands of the insurgents 60 Founding of the insurgent groups Edit The first major armed movement to emerge starting almost immediately after the coup was the Islamic Armed Movement MIA It was led by the ex soldier General Abdelkader Chebouti a longstanding Islamist The MIA was well organized and structured and favored a long term jihad targeting the state and its representatives and based on a guerrilla campaign like that of the War of Independence 61 From prison Ali Benhadj issued a fatwa giving the MIA his blessing 61 In February 1992 ex soldier ex Afghan fighter and former FIS head of security Said Mekhloufi founded the Movement for an Islamic State MEI The other main jihad group was called the Armed Islamic Group GIA from French Groupe Islamique Arme In January 1993 Abdelhak Layada declared his group independent of Chebouti s It became particularly prominent around Algiers and its suburbs in urban environments It took a hardline position opposed to both the government and the FIS affirming that political pluralism is equivalent to sedition 62 63 and issuing death threats against several FIS and MIA leaders It favored a strategy of immediate action to destabilize the enemy by creating an atmosphere of general insecurity through repeated attacks It considered opposition to violence among some in the FIS as not only misguided but impious 61 It was far less selective than the MIA which insisted on ideological training as a result it was regularly infiltrated by the security forces resulting in a rapid leadership turnover as successive heads were killed The various groups arranged several meetings to attempt to unite their forces accepting the overall leadership of Chebouti in theory At the last of these at Tamesguida on 1 September Chebouti expressed his concern about the movement s lack of discipline in particular worrying that the Algiers airport attack which he had not approved could alienate supporters The meeting was broken up by an assault from the security forces provoking suspicions which prevented any further meetings However the MEI merged with the GIA in May 1994 The FIS itself established an underground network with clandestine newspapers and even an MIA linked radio station and began issuing official statements from abroad starting in late 1992 However at this stage the opinions of the guerrilla movements on the FIS were mixed while many supported FIS a significant faction led by the Afghans regarded party political activity as inherently un Islamic and therefore rejected FIS statements citation needed In 1993 the divisions within the guerrilla movement became more distinct The MIA and MEI concentrated in the maquis attempted to develop a military strategy against the state typically targeting the security services and sabotaging or bombing state institutions From its inception on however the GIA concentrated in urban areas called for and implemented the killing of anyone supporting the authorities including government employees such as teachers and civil servants It assassinated journalists and intellectuals such as Tahar Djaout saying that The journalists who fight against Islamism through the pen will perish by the sword 64 It soon stepped up its attacks by targeting civilians who refused to live by their prohibitions and in September 1993 began killing foreigners 65 declaring that anyone who exceeds the GIA deadline of 30 November will be responsible for his own sudden death 66 26 Foreigners were killed by the end of 1993 67 and virtually all foreigners left the country indeed often illegal Algerian emigration too rose substantially as people sought a way out At the same time the number of visas granted to Algerians by other countries began to drop substantially Failed negotiations and guerrilla infighting 1994 Edit The violence continued throughout 1994 although the economy began to improve during this time following negotiations with the IMF the government succeeded in rescheduling debt repayments providing it with a substantial financial windfall 68 and further obtained some 40 billion francs from the international community to back its economic liberalization 69 As it became obvious that the fighting would continue for some time General Liamine Zeroual was named new president of the High Council of State he was considered to belong to the dialoguiste pro negotiation rather than eradicateur eradicator faction of the army Soon after taking office he began negotiations with the imprisoned FIS leadership releasing some prisoners by way of encouragement The talks split the pro government political spectrum The largest political parties especially the FLN and FFS continued to call for compromise while other forces most notably the General Union of Algerian Workers UGTA but including smaller leftist and feminist groups such as the secularist RCD sided with the eradicators A few shadowy pro government paramilitaries such as the Organisation of Young Free Algerians OJAL emerged and began attacking civilian Islamist supporters On 10 March 1994 over 1000 mainly Islamist prisoners escaped Tazoult prison in what appeared to be a major coup for the guerrillas later conspiracy theorists would suggest that this had been staged to allow the security forces to infiltrate the GIA Meanwhile under Cherif Gousmi its leader since March the GIA became the most high profile guerrilla army in 1994 and achieved supremacy over the FIS 65 In May several Islamist leaders that were not jailed Mohammed Said Abderraraq Redjem including the MEI s Said Makhloufi joined the GIA This was a surprise to many observers and a blow to the FIS since the GIA had been issuing death threats against the leaders since November 1993 The move was interpreted either as the result of intra FIS competition or as an attempt to change the GIA s course from within 65 FIS loyal guerrillas threatened with marginalization attempted to unite their forces 70 In July 1994 70 the MIA together with the remainder of the MEI and a variety of smaller groups citation needed united as the Islamic Salvation Army a term that had previously sometimes been used as a general label for pro FIS guerrillas declaring their allegiance to FIS It national amir was Madani Merzag 70 By the end of 1994 they controlled over half the guerrillas of the east and west but barely 20 in the center near the capital which was where the GIA were mainly based They issued communiques condemning the GIA s indiscriminate targeting of women journalists and other civilians not involved in the repression and attacked the GIA s school arson campaign The AIS and FIS supported a negotiated settlement with the government military and the AIS s role was to strengthening FIS s hand in the negotiations 70 The GIA was absolutely opposed to negotiations and sought instead to purge the land of the ungodly including the Algerian government The two insurgent groups would soon be locked in bloody combat 70 Despite the growing power of the GIA inside the liberated Islamic zones of the insurgency conditions were beginning to deteriorate The Islamist notables entrepreneurs and shopkeepers had at first funded the insurgent amirs and fighters hoping for revenge against the government that had seized power from the FIS movement they supported But over the months the voluntary Islamic tax became a full scale extortionist racket operated by band of armed men claiming to represent an ever more shadowy cause who also fought each other over turf The extortion and the fact that the zones were surrounded by the army impoverished and victimized the pious business class which eventually fled the zones severely weakening the Islamist cause 65 On 26 August the GIA even declared a caliphate or Islamic government for Algeria with Gousmi as Commander of the Faithful 71 However the very next day Said Mekhloufi announced his withdrawal from the GIA claiming that the GIA had deviated from Islam and that this caliphate was an effort by ex FIS leader Mohammed Said to take over the GIA The GIA continued attacks on its usual targets notably assassinating artists such as Cheb Hasni and in late August added a new practice to its activities threatening insufficiently Islamist schools with arson At the end of October the government announced the failure of its negotiations with the FIS Instead Zeroual embarked on a new plan he scheduled presidential elections for 1995 while promoting eradicationists such as Lamari within the army and organizing self defense militias in villages to fight the guerrillas The end of 1994 saw a noticeable upsurge in violence Over 1994 Algeria s isolation deepened most foreign press agencies such as Reuters left the country this year while the Moroccan border closed and the main foreign airlines cancelled all routes The resulting gap in news coverage was further worsened by a government order in June banning Algerian media from reporting any terrorism related news not covered in official press releases 72 A few FIS leaders notably Rabah Kebir had escaped into exile abroad Upon the invitation of the Rome based Community of Sant Egidio in November 1994 they began negotiations in Rome with other opposition parties both Islamist and secular FLN FFS FIS MDA PT JMC They came out with a mutual agreement on 14 January 1995 the Sant Egidio platform This presented a set of principles respect for human rights and multi party democracy rejection of army rule and dictatorship recognition of Islam Arab and Berber ethnic identity as essential aspects of Algeria s national identity demand for the release of FIS leaders and an end to extrajudicial killing and torture on all sides To the surprise of many even Ali Belhadj endorsed the agreement which meant that the FIS had returned into the legal framework along with the other opposition parties The initiative was also received favorably by influential circles in the United States However for the agreement to work the FIS still had to have the support of its original power base when in fact the pious bourgeous had abandon it for the collaborationist Hamas party and the urban poor for jihad 73 and the other side the government had to be interested in the agreement Those two features being lacking the platform s effect was at best limited though some argue that in the words of Andrea Riccardi who brokered the negotiations for the Community of Sant Egidio the platform made the Algerian military leave the cage of a solely military confrontation and forced them to react with a political act the 1995 presidential elections The next few months saw the killing of some 100 Islamist prisoners in the Serkadji prison mutiny and a major success for the security forces in battle at Ain Defla resulting in the deaths of hundreds of guerrilla fighters Cherif Gousmi was eventually succeeded by Djamel Zitouni as GIA head Zitouni extended the GIA s attacks on civilians to French soil beginning with the hijacking of Air France Flight 8969 at the end of December 1994 and continuing with several bombings and attempted bombings throughout 1995 It is thought Zitouni hoped to undermine the FIS by proving its irrelevance to the outcome of the war 74 and to induce the French government to withdraw support from the Algerian government to put a stop to the terrorism 75 But by eliminating the FIS as a factor the campaign also suggested to outsiders in America and Europe that the only force capable of stopping the terrorists was the Algerian government 74 In any case in France the GIA attacks created a backlash of fear of young Muslim immigrants joining the campaign 75 The campaign was a major fault line dividing the insurgents The GIA exalted in the enthusiasm of the disinherited poor young Algerian men every time the former colonial power was attacked while the FIS leaders abroad struggled to persuade the governments of Europe and the United States that Islamic FIS government would guarantee social order and expand the market economy in Algeria 76 In Algeria itself attacks continued with car bombs and assassinations of musicians sportsmen and unveiled women as well as police and soldiers Even at this stage the seemingly counterproductive nature of many of its attacks led to speculation encouraged by FIS members abroad whose importance was undermined by GIA hostility to negotiation that the group had been infiltrated by Algerian secret services The region south of Algiers in particular came to be dominated by the GIA who called it the liberated zone Later it would come to be known as the Triangle of Death Reports of battles between the AIS and GIA increased and the GIA reiterated its death threats against FIS and AIS leaders assassinating a co founder of the FIS Abdelbaki Sahraoui in Paris At this point foreign sources estimated the total number of guerrillas to be about 27 000 Politics resume militias emerge 1995 96 Edit Following the breakdown of negotiations with the FIS the government decided to hold presidential elections On 16 November 1995 former head of ground forces of the Algerian military Liamine Zeroual was elected president with 60 of votes cast in an election contested by many candidates The results reflected various popular opinions ranging from support for secularism and opposition to Islamism to a desire for an end to the violence regardless of politics The FIS had urged Algerians to boycott the election and the GIA threatened to kill anyone who voted using the slogan one vote one bullet but turnout was relatively high among the pious middle class who had formerly supported the FIS but become disillusioned by the endless violence and racketeering by gangs of young men in the name of jihad 76 and turned out for Islamists Mahfoud Nahnah 25 and Noureddine Boukrouh 77 Hopes grew that Algerian politics would finally be normalized Zeroual followed this up by pushing through a new constitution in 1996 substantially strengthening the power of the President and adding a second house that would be partly elected and partly appointed by the President In November 1996 the text was passed by a national referendum while the official turnout rate was 80 this vote was unmonitored and the claimed high turnout was considered by most to be implausible The election results were a setback for the armed groups who saw a significant increase in desertions immediately following the elections The FIS Rabah Kebir responded to the apparent shift in popular mood by adopting a more conciliatory tone towards the government but was condemned by some parts of the party and of the AIS The GIA was shaken by internal dissension shortly after the election its leadership killed the FIS leaders who had joined the GIA accusing them of attempting a takeover This purge accelerated the disintegration of the GIA Mustapha Kartali Ali Benhadjar and Hassan Hattab s factions all refused to recognize Zitouni s leadership starting around late 1995 although they would not formally break away until later In December the GIA killed the AIS leader for central Algeria Azzedine Baa and in January pledged to fight the AIS as an enemy particularly in the west full scale battles between them became common The Government s political moves were combined with a substantial increase in the pro Government militias profile Self defense militias often called Patriots for short consisting of trusted local citizens trained and armed by the army were founded in towns near areas where guerrillas were active and were promoted on national TV The program was received well in some parts of the country but was less popular in others it would be substantially increased over the next few years particularly after the massacres of 1997 Massacres and reconciliation 1996 97 Edit Massacres of over 50 people in the years 1997 and 1998 In July 1996 GIA leader Djamel Zitouni was killed by one of the breakaway ex GIA factions and was succeeded by Antar Zouabri who would prove an even bloodier leader 1997 elections Edit Parliamentary elections were held on 5 June 1997 They were dominated by the National Democratic Rally RND a new party created in early 1997 for Zeroual s supporters which got 156 out of 380 seats followed mainly by the MSP as Hamas had been required to rename itself and the FLN at over 60 seats each Views on this election were mixed most major opposition parties filed complaints and that a party RND founded only a few months earlier and which had never taken part in any election before should win more votes than any other seemed implausible to observers citation needed The RND FLN and MSP formed a coalition government with the RND s Ahmed Ouyahia as prime minister There were hints of a softening towards FIS Abdelkader Hachani was released and Abbassi Madani moved to house arrest Village massacres Edit At this point however a new and vital problem emerged Starting around April the Thalit massacre Algeria was wracked by massacres of intense brutality and unprecedented size previous massacres had occurred in the conflict but always on a substantially smaller scale Typically targeting entire villages or neighborhoods and disregarding the age and sex of victims killing tens and sometimes hundreds of civilians at a time These massacres continued through the end of 1998 changing the nature of the political situation considerably The areas south and east of Algiers which had voted strongly for FIS in 1991 were hit particularly hard the Rais and Bentalha massacres in particular shocked worldwide observers Pregnant women were sliced open children were hacked to pieces or dashed against walls men s limbs were hacked off one by one and as the attackers retreated they would kidnap young women to keep as sex slaves Although this quotation by Nesroullah Yous a survivor of Bentalha may be an exaggeration it expresses the apparent mood of the attackers We have the whole night to rape your women and children drink your blood Even if you escape today we ll come back tomorrow to finish you off We re here to send you to your God 78 Dispute over responsibility Edit The GIA s responsibility for these massacres remains disputed In a communique its amir Antar Zouabri claimed credit for both Rais and Bentalha calling the killings an offering to God and declaring impious the victims and all Algerians who had not joined its ranks 79 By declaring that except for those who are with us all others are apostates and deserving of death 80 it had adopted a takfirist ideology In some cases it has been suggested that the GIA were motivated to commit a massacre by a village s joining the Patriot program which they saw as evidence of disloyalty in others that rivalry with other groups e g Mustapha Kartali s breakaway faction played a part Its policy of massacring civilians was cited by the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat as one of the main reasons it split off from the GIA However according to reports by Amnesty International 81 and Human Rights Watch 82 army barracks were stationed within a few hundred meters of the villages yet did nothing to stop the killings At about the same time a number of people claiming to be defectors from the Algerian security services such as Habib Souaidia having fled to Western countries alleged that the security services had themselves committed some of the massacres 83 84 85 86 page needed Note 4 These and other details raised suspicions that the state was in some way collaborating with or even controlling parts of the GIA particularly through infiltration by the secret services a theory popularised by Nesroullah Yous and FIS itself 88 This suggestion provoked furious reactions from some quarters in Algeria and has been rejected by many researchers Note 5 though others regard it as plausible Note 6 In contrast Algerians such as Zazi Sadou have collected testimonies by survivors that their attackers were unmasked and were recognised as local radicals in one case even an elected member of the FIS Note 7 Roger Kaplan writing in The Atlantic Monthly dismissed insinuations of Government involvement in the massacres Note 8 However as Youcef Bouandel notes Regardless of the explanations one may have regarding the violence the authorities credibility has been tarnished by its non assistance to endangered civilian villagers being massacred in the vicinity of military barracks 93 Another explanation is the deeply ingrained tradition of purposeful accumulation of wealth and status by means of violence 94 outweighing any basic national identity with feelings of solidarity loyalty for what was a province of the Ottoman Empire for much of its history AIS unilateral truce Edit The AIS which at this point was engaged in an all out war with the GIA as well as the Government found itself in an untenable position The GIA seemed a more immediately pressing enemy and AIS members expressed fears that the massacres which it had condemned more than once would be blamed on them On 21 September 1997 the AIS head Madani Mezrag ordered a unilateral and unconditional ceasefire starting 1 October in order to unveil the enemy that hides behind these abominable massacres The AIS thus largely took itself out of the political equation reducing the fighting to a struggle between the Government the GIA and the various splinter groups that were increasingly breaking away from the GIA Ali Benhadjar s FIS loyalist Islamic League for Da wa and Jihad LIDD formed in February 1997 allied itself with the AIS and observed the same ceasefire Over the next three years the AIS would gradually negotiate an amnesty for its members GIA destroyed 1998 2000 Edit After receiving much international pressure to act the EU sent two delegations one of them led by Mario Soares to visit Algeria and investigate the massacres in the first half of 1998 their reports condemned the Islamist armed groups The GIA s policy of massacring civilians had already caused a split among its commanders with some rejecting the policy on 14 September 1998 this disagreement was formalized with the formation of the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat GSPC based in the mountains west of Kabylie and led by Hassan Hattab Massacres continued throughout 1998 attributed to armed groups that had formerly belonged to the GIA some engaged in banditry other settling scores with the patriots or others some enlisting in the services of landowners to frighten illegal occupants away 95 Eventually towns soon became safer although massacres continued in rural areas citation needed On 11 September President Zeroual surprised observers by announcing his resignation New elections were arranged and on 15 April 1999 the army backed ex independence fighter Abdelaziz Bouteflika was elected president with according to the authorities 74 of the votes All the other candidates had withdrawn from the election shortly before citing fraud concerns Bouteflika continued negotiations with the AIS and on 5 June the AIS agreed in principle to disband Bouteflika followed up this success for the Government by pardoning a number of Islamist prisoners convicted of minor offenses and pushing the Civil Harmony Act through Parliament a law allowing Islamist fighters not guilty of murder or rape to escape all prosecution if they turn themselves in citation needed This law was finally approved by referendum on 16 September 1999 and a number of fighters including Mustapha Kartali took advantage of it to give themselves up and resume normal life sometimes angering those who had suffered at the hands of the guerrillas FIS leadership expressed dissatisfaction with the results feeling that the AIS had stopped fighting without solving any of the issues but their main voice outside of prison Abdelkader Hachani was assassinated on 22 November Violence declined though not stopping altogether and a sense of normality started returning to Algeria citation needed The AIS fully disbanded after 11 January 2000 having negotiated a special amnesty with the Government The GIA torn by splits and desertions and denounced by all sides even in the Islamist movement was slowly destroyed by army operations over the next few years by the time of Antar Zouabri s death in early 2002 it was effectively incapacitated The Government s efforts were given a boost in the aftermath of 11 September 2001 attacks United States sympathy for Algeria s government increased and was expressed concretely through such actions as the freezing of GIA and GSPC assets and the supply of infrared goggles to the army citation needed GSPC continues Edit With the GIA s decline the GSPC was left as the most active rebel group with about 300 fighters in 2003 96 It continued a campaign of assassinations of police and army personnel in its area and also managed to expand into the Sahara broadening the conflict into the insurgency in the Maghreb 2002 present Its southern division led by Amari Saifi nicknamed Abderrezak el Para the paratrooper kidnapped a number of German tourists in 2003 before being forced to flee to sparsely populated areas of Mali and later Niger and Chad where he was captured By late 2003 the group s founder had been supplanted by the even more radical Nabil Sahraoui who announced his open support for al Qaeda thus strengthening government ties between the U S and Algeria He was reportedly killed shortly afterwards and was succeeded by Abou Mossaab Abdelouadoud in 2004 97 2004 presidential election and amnesty Edit The release of FIS leaders Madani and Belhadj in 2003 had no observable effect on the situation illustrating a newfound governmental confidence which would be deepened by the 2004 presidential election in which Bouteflika was reelected by 85 with support from two major parties and one faction of the third major party The vote was seen as confirming strong popular support for Bouteflika s policy towards the guerrillas and the successful termination of large scale violence citation needed In September 2005 a national referendum was held on an amnesty proposal by Bouteflika s government similar to the 1999 law to end legal proceedings against individuals who were no longer fighting and to provide compensation to families of people killed by Government forces The controversial Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation was declared to have won with 97 support and with 80 of participation 98 The conditions of the campaign in Algeria were criticized in the French press in particular in Le Monde and L Humanite citation needed Lawyer Ali Merabet for example founder of Somoud an NGO which represents the families of the disappeared was opposed to the Charter which would force the victims to grant forgiveness He remains doubtful that the time of the FIS has truly ended and notes that while people no longer support them the project of the FIS which he denies is Islamic still exists and remains a threat 99 The proposal was implemented by Presidential decree in February 2006 and adopted on 29 September 2006 Particularly controversial was its provision of immunity against prosecution to surrendered ex guerrillas for all but the worst crimes and Army personnel for any action safeguarding the nation 100 According to Algerian paper El Khabar over 400 GSPC guerrillas surrendered under its terms 101 Estimates of the rebels size in 2005 ranged from 300 to 1000 102 The International Federation of Human Rights FIDH has opposed the amnesty 103 While the fighting died down a state of emergency remained in place 104 only being lifted in February 2011 due to renewed protests amidst the ongoing Arab Spring Death toll EditBouteflika said in 1999 that 100 000 people had died by that time and in a speech on 25 February 2005 spoke of a round figure of 150 000 people killed in the war 102 Fouad Ajami argues the toll could be as high as 200 000 and that it is in the government s interest to minimize casualties 32 These figures not broken down into government forces insurgents and civilians are commonly cited as the war s death toll However this estimate may be too high A 2008 study found about 26 000 people killed through combat operations massacres bombings and assassinations alongside 18 000 people disappeared and presumed killed in secret This would give a total death toll of around 44 000 people 31 This is out of a population of about 25 010 000 in 1990 and 31 193 917 in 2000 31 105 Use of children EditFurther information History of children in the military Throughout the war children were recruited frequently by the armed groups fighting the government 30 A government allied militia the Legitimate Defence Groups LDG also used children according to some reports 30 106 Although the rules for joining the LDG were the same as the army in which only adults were recruited by conscription the LDG applied no safeguards to ensure that children could not join up 106 The extent of child recruitment during the war remains unknown 106 Analysis and impact EditFactors that prevented Algeria from following in the path of Saudi Arabia and Iran into an Islamic state include minority groups army rank and file veterans of the War of Independence the secular middle class that threw their support with the government and Islamist supporters that lost faith with the Salafi Jihadis Unlike in Iran the army rank and file stayed on the side of the government Veterans of the War of Independence known as the revolutionary family felt its privileges directly tied to the government and supported the regime Also unlike in Iran the secular middle class remained firmly in support of the government Branded as sons of France by the jihadis they feared an Islamist takeover far more than they hated the corruption and ineptitude of the FLN government 107 The part of the middle class who supported the FIS supported the jihad against the government at first However living in GIA controlled areas cut off by the security forces they suffered from extortion from less than disciplined young jihadis demanding Zakat Business owners abandoned the GIA to support first the AIS and eventually the government approved Islamist Hamas or Movement of Society for Peace party 65 The young urban poor themselves whose 1988 October Riots had initiated reforms and put an end to one party rule was crushed as a political factor 108 At least at first the unspeakable atrocities and enormous loss of life on behalf of a military defeat drastically weakened Islamism as a whole throughout the Muslim world and led to much time and energy being spent by Islamists distancing themselves from extremism 109 In Algeria the war left the public with a deep fear of instability according to Algerian journalist Kamel Daoud The country was one of the few in the Arab world not to participate in the Arab Spring 110 See also Edit Africa portal War portalList of Algerian assassinated journalists Terrorist bombings in Algeria Garde communale Algerian War Censorship in Algeria Human rights in Algeria Les eradicateurs Les dialoguistes Sant Egidio platform Timeline of the Algerian Civil WarNotes Edit Hassan Hattab s GSPC which has condemned the GIA s indiscriminate attacks on civilians and since going it alone has tended to revert to the classic MIA AIS strategy of confining its attacks to guerrilla forces 33 In 1989 40 percent of Algeria s population of 24 million were under 15 years of age the urban population was in excess of 50 percent of the total population the birthrate was 3 1 per year 36 price fell from over US 35 per barrel in 1980 to below 10 in 1986 prices not adjusted for inflation 37 When I enlisted into the Algerian army in 1989 I was miles away from thinking that I would be a witness to the tragedy that has struck my country I have seen colleagues burn alive a 15 year old child I have seen soldiers disguising themselves as terrorists and massacring civilians 87 Still there is substantial evidence that many among the deadliest massacres have been perpetrated by Islamist guerrillas The most important evidence comes from testimonies of survivors who were able to identify local Islamists among the attackers see below In fact survivors who openly accuse the army for its failure to intervene also expressed no doubt about the identity of the killers pointing to the Islamist guerrillas e g Tuquoi J P 1997 Algerie Autopsie d un Massacre Le Monde 11 November Moreover some of the troubling aspects of this story can be explained without reference to an army conspiracy For example in civil wars prisoners tend to be killed on the spot rather than taken prisoner Laqueur W 1998 Guerrilla Warfare A Historical and Critical Study New Brunswick NJ Transaction Militiamen the most likely to capture guerrillas have openly stated that they took no prisoners Amnesty International 1997b Algeria Civilian Population Caught in a Spiral of Violence Report MDE 28 23 97 p 17 Journalists working in the field have found credible testimonies in support of the thesis that most massacres are organized by the rebels Leclere T 1997 Rais Retour sur un Massacre Telerama 22 October Tuquoi 1997 among others European foreign ministries believe that it is Islamist guerrillas who are responsible for the massacres Observer 9 February 1998 Although it is impossible to know the full truth at this point see Charef A 1998 Algerie Autopsie d un massacre Paris L Aube the assumption that many massacres were committed by the Islamist guerrillas seems plausible and is widely adopted by area experts Addi L 1998 Algeria s Army Algeria s Agony Foreign Affairs July August p 44 and other authors Smith B 1998 Algeria The Horror The New York Review of Books XLV 7 p 27 Likewise the reluctance of the army to intervene and stop some of these massacres is also beyond doubt 89 Under Zouabri the extremism and violence of the GIA became completely indiscriminate leading to the horrific massacres of 1997 and 1998 although once again great care must be exercised over these incidents as it is quite clear that the greatest beneficiary from them was the Algerian state There is considerable indirect evidence of state involvement and some direct evidence as well which is discussed below 90 Some fundamentalist leaders have attempted to distance themselves from these massacres and claimed that the State was behind them or that they were the work of the State armed self defense groups Some human rights groups have echoed this claim to some extent Inside Algeria and particularly among survivors of the communities attacked the view is sharply different In many cases survivors have identified their attackers as the assailants enter the villages unmasked and are often from the locality In one case a survivor identified a former elected FIS officials as one of the perpetrators of a massacre Testimonies Collected by Zazi Sadou 91 To people who had been watching Algeria s evolution the assumption that sinister complicities within the Algerian state were involved in the assassinations and massacres was libelous I thought of Khalida Messaoudi a forty year old former teacher and political activist who went into hiding after being sentenced to die by those who shared the ideology of the killers who descended on Had T Chekala Among democratic human rights and feminist organizations very few have expressed support for Messaoudi In the United States only the American Federation of Teachers has recognized her struggle for human rights She was condemned for being an impious Zionist she is a nonpracticing Muslim loose radical woman and thousands of women in Algeria have been killed for much less Sixteen year old girls for instance have been dragged out of classrooms and slaughtered in school yards like sheep because the killers decreed that nubile girls should not be in school This was the context and the background and the reality And now when the world paid attention it was to suggest the involvement of Government death squads 92 References Edit a b Paul Collier Nicholas Sambanis 2005 Understanding Civil War Africa World Bank Publications p 235 ISBN 978 0 8213 6047 7 a b Rex Brynen Bahgat Korany Paul Noble 1995 Political Liberalization and Democratization in the Arab World Vol 1 Lynne Rienner Publishers p 289 ISBN 978 1 55587 579 4 a b c d e Sidaoui Riadh 2009 Islamic Politics and the Military Algeria 1962 2008 In Jan Erik Lane Hamadi Redissi Riyaḍ Ṣaydawi eds Religion and Politics Islam and Muslim Civilization Ashgate pp 241 243 ISBN 978 0 7546 7418 4 a b c d e Karl DeRouen Jr Uk Heo 2007 Civil Wars of the World Major Conflicts Since World War II ABC CLIO pp 115 117 ISBN 978 1 85109 919 1 Arms trade in practice Hrw org October 2000 Torgovlya oruzhiem i budushee Belorussii Yahia H Zoubir Haizam Amirah Fernandez 2008 North Africa Politics Region and the Limits of Transformation Routledge p 184 ISBN 978 1 134 08740 2 Statement of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the National Community abroad UN Algeria 16 July 2021 Archived from the original on 20 July 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2021 Atkins Stephen E 2004 Encyclopedia of Modern Worldwide Extremists and Extremist Groups Greenwood p 11 ISBN 978 0 313 32485 7 a b c Mannes Aaron 2004 Profiles in Terror The Guide to Middle East Terrorist Organizations Rowman amp Littlefield p 8 ISBN 978 0 7425 3525 1 a b Cordesman Anthony H 2002 A Tragedy of Arms Military and Security Developments in the Maghreb Greenwood Publishing Group p 126 ISBN 978 0 275 96936 3 a b Brosche Johan Hoglund Kristine 2015 The diversity of peace and war in Africa Armaments Disarmament and International Security Oxford University Press p 116 ISBN 978 0 19 873781 0 Lyubov Grigorova Mincheva Lyubov Grigorova Ted Robert Gurr 2013 Crime terror Alliances and the State Ethnonationalist and Islamist Challenges to Regional Security Routledge p 96 ISBN 978 0 415 50648 9 Kepel Gilles 2006 Jihad The Trail of Political Islam I B Tauris pp 263 273 ISBN 978 1 84511 257 8 Siegel Pascale Combelles 7 November 2008 Coalition Attack Brings an End to the Career of al Qaeda in Iraq s Second in Command Terrorism Monitor Vol 6 no 21 Petersson Claes 13 July 2005 Terrorbas i Sverige Aftonbladet in Swedish Tabarani Gabriel G 2011 Jihad s New Heartlands Why The West Has Failed To Contain Islamic Fundamentalism AuthorHouse p 329 ISBN 978 1 4678 9180 6 Boot Max 2013 Appendix Invisible Armies Harmon Stephen A 2014 Terror and Insurgency in the Sahara Sahel Region Corruption Contraband Jihad and the Mali War of 2012 2013 Ashgate p 54 ISBN 978 1 4094 5475 5 A hostage crisis haunted by the ghosts of Algeria s bloody past The Washington Post Martinez Algerian Civil War 1998 p 162 Martinez Algerian Civil War 1998 p 215 Hagelstein Roman 2007 Where and When does Violence Pay Off The Algerian Civil War PDF HICN Households in Conflict Network 24 Retrieved 11 April 2012 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 255 Prince Rob 16 October 2012 Algerians Shed Few Tears for Deceased President Chadli Bendjedid Foreign Policy in Focus Retrieved 17 June 2015 Cavatorta Francesco 2008 Alternative Lessons from the Algerian Scenario Perspectives on Terrorism 2 1 Archived from the original on 19 February 2018 Retrieved 14 June 2015 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 254 Whitney Craig R 24 May 1996 7 French Monks Reported Killed By Islamic Militants in Algeria The New York Times Retrieved 14 June 2015 Entre menace censure et liberte La presse prive algerienne se bat pour survivre 31 March 1998 a b c Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers 2001 Global Report on Child Soldiers child soldiers org Archived from the original on 25 May 2019 Retrieved 16 May 2018 a b c Explaining the Violence Pattern of the Algerian Civil War Roman Hagelstein Households in Conflict Network pp 9 17 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 12 August 2017 Retrieved 22 October 2012 a b Ajami Fouad 27 January 2010 The Furrows of Algeria New Republic Retrieved 4 June 2015 Hugh Roberts The Battlefield Algeria 1988 2002 Studies in a Broken Polity Verso London 2003 p 269 Whitlock Craig 5 October 2006 Al Qaeda s Far Reaching New Partner The Washington Post p A01 Algerian group backs al Qaeda BBC News 23 October 2003 Retrieved 7 November 2008 a b c d e Kepel Jihad 2002 p 159 60 ROBERT D HERSHEY JR 30 December 1989 Worrying Anew Over Oil Imports The New York Times Retrieved 26 April 2008 a b Takeyh Ray Summer 2003 Islamism in Algeria A struggle between hope and agony Middle East Policy Council on Foreign Relations 10 2 62 75 doi 10 1111 1475 4967 00106 Archived from the original on 11 May 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2015 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 166 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 165 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 162 63 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 164 a b c Kepel Jihad 2002 p 166 67 a b c Kepel Jihad 2002 p 169 a b Joffe George 2008 Democracy and the Muslim World In Teixeira Nuno Severiano ed The International Politics of Democratization Comparative Perspectives Routledge p 167 ISBN 978 1 134 05436 7 Abassi Madani quoted in Algerie Actualite 24 December 1989 Ali Belhadj quoted in Horizons 29 February 1989 see also International Women s Human Rights Law Clinic Archived 7 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine amp Women Living Under Muslim Laws Shadow Report on Algeria p 15 algeria interface com Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 26 February 2015 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 171 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 170 Martinez Algerian Civil War 1998 p 53 81 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 170 71 Interview with Slimane Zeghidour Politique internationale Autumn 1990 p 156 Martinez Luis 2000 1998 The Algerian Civil War 1990 1998 Columbia University Press p 38 ISBN 978 0 231 11996 2 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 173 a b c Kepel Jihad 2002 p 174 Djerejian Edward P Martin William 2008 Danger and Opportunity An American Ambassador s Journey Through the Middle East Simon and Schuster p 22 ISBN 978 1 4391 1412 4 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 258 a b c d e Kepel Jihad 2002 p 262 a b c Kepel Jihad 2002 p 260 Abdelhak Layada quoted in Jeune Afrique 27 January 1994 quoted in Willis 1996 Agence France Presse 20 November 1993 cited by Willis 1996 Sid Ahmed Mourad quoted in Jeune Afrique 27 January 1994 quoted in Willis 1996 a b c d e Kepel Jihad 2002 p 263 Naughton Philippe 20 November 1993 Islamic militants death threat drives foreigners from Algeria The Times London quoted in Willis 1996 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 264 Martinez Algerian Civil War 1998 pp 92 3 179 Martinez Algerian Civil War 1998 p 228 9 a b c d e Kepel Jihad 2002 p 265 Algeria Fields of Fire An Atlas of Ethnic Conflict Lulu 2009 p 2 07 ISBN 978 0 9554657 7 2 Ministry of Interior and of Communications confidential communique quoted in Benjamin Stora 2001 La guerre invisible Paris Presse de Science Po ISBN 978 2 7246 0847 2 p 25 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 268 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 268 9 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 267 a b Kepel Jihad 2002 p 271 Roberts Hugh Algeria s Contested Elections Middle East Report 209 Archived from the original on 9 June 2011 Retrieved 16 February 2009 Nesroullah Yous Salima Mellah 2000 Qui a tue a Bentalha La Decouverte Paris ISBN 978 2 7071 3332 8 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 272 3 El Watan 21 January quoted in Willis 1996 Algeria A human rights crisis PDF Amnesty International 5 September 1997 Archived from the original PDF on 30 December 2013 Retrieved 7 November 2013 html dead link Police role in Algerian killings exposed The Observer 11 January 1998 Algeria regime was behind Paris bombs Manchester Guardian Weekly 16 November 1997 Souaidia 2001 Quote Archived 26 October 2005 at the Wayback Machine Anwar N Haddam An Islamist Vision for Algeria Middle East Quarterly September 1996 Retrieved 18 January 2013 Kalyvas Stathis N Wanton and Senseless The Logic of Massacres in Algeria Archived 12 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Rationality and Society 1999 11 George Joffe Archived 12 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Report Ahmad Zaoui 3 June 2003 p 16 See also Martinez 1998 217 So might the GIA not be the hidden face of a military regime faced with the need to rearrange its economic resources Shadow Report on Algeria To The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women Submitted by International Women s Human Rights Law Clinic and Women Living Under Muslim Laws January 1999 p 20 note 27 Kaplan 1998 p 18 Political Violence And The Prospect Of Peace In Algeria in Perihelion journal of the European Rim Policy And Investment Council April 2003 Calvert John March 2003 The Logic of the Algerian Civil War Review of Luis Martinez The Algerian Civil War 1990 1998 H Net online Retrieved 14 June 2015 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 274 Profile Algeria s Salafist group BBC News 14 May 2003 Retrieved 7 November 2008 New chief for Algeria s Islamists Arezki Himeur BBC News 7 September 2004 Algerie le oui au referendum remporte plus de 97 des voix Le Monde 29 September 2005 in French En Algerie dans la Mitidja ni pardon ni oubli Archived 29 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine Le Monde 28 September 2005 in French Algeria New Amnesty Law Will Ensure Atrocities Go Unpunished International Center for Transitional Justice Press Release 1 March 2006 استفادة 408 شخص من قانون المصالحة وإرهابي يسلم نفسه Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine El Khabar Archived 27 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine 25 September 2006 a b Algeria puts strife toll at 150 000 Al Jazeera English 23 February 2005 Retrieved 7 November 2013 Projet de charte pour la paix et la reconciliation nationale pas d impunite au nom de la reconciliation International Federation of Human Rights 22 September 2005 in French Country profile Algeria BBC News 20 September 2008 Archived from the original on 16 February 2009 Retrieved 16 February 2009 Algeria Encyclopedia of the Nations a b c Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers 2004 Child Soldiers Global Report 2004 child soldiers org Retrieved 16 May 2018 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 175 6 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 275 Kepel Jihad 2002 p 256 DAOUD KAMEL 29 May 2015 The Algerian Exception The New York Times Retrieved 2 June 2015 Bibliography EditKaplan Roger August 1998 The Libel of Moral Equivalence The Atlantic Monthly Vol 282 no 2 Kepel Gilles 2002 Jihad The Trail of Political Islam Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01090 1 Luis Martinez translated by Jonathan Derrick 1998 The Algerian Civil War 1990 1998 London Hurst amp Co ISBN 978 1 85065 517 6 William B Quandt 1998 Between Ballots and Bullets Algeria s Transition from Authoritarianism Washington DC Brookings Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8157 7301 6 Retrieved 23 February 2005 Souaidia Habib 2001 La sale guerre The dirty war in French Paris folio actuel ISBN 9782070419883 Michael Willis 1996 The Islamist Challenge in Algeria A Political History New York NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 9328 2 Further reading EditM Al Ahnaf B Botiveau F Fregosi 1991 L Algerie par ses islamistes Paris Karthala ISBN 978 2 86537 318 5 Marco Impagliazzo Mario Giro 1997 Algeria in ostaggio Milano Guerini e Associati External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Algerian Civil War On the secret war in Algeria and French machinations Shadow Report on Algeria presented by the International Women s Human Rights Law Clinic amp Women Living Under Muslim Laws Islamism Violence and Reform in Algeria Turning the Page ICG Middle East Report No 29 registration required Chronologie d une tragedie cachee a timeline Le mouvement islamiste algerien Salima Mellah Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Algerian Civil War amp oldid 1127792494, 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