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National Liberation Front (Algeria)

The National Liberation Front (Arabic: جبهة التحرير الوطني, romanizedJabhatu l-Taḥrīri l-Waṭanī; French: Front de libération nationale) commonly known by its French acronym FLN,[a] is a nationalist political party in Algeria. It was the principal nationalist movement during the Algerian War and the sole legal and ruling political party of the Algerian state until other parties were legalised in 1989.[19]

National Liberation Front
جبهة التحرير الوطني
AbbreviationFLN
Secretary-GeneralAbdelkrim Benmbarek[1]
Founded23 October 1954; 69 years ago (1954-10-23)
Preceded byCRUA
HeadquartersAlgiers
IdeologyAlgerian nationalism[2]
Arab nationalism[3][4][5]
Pan-Arabism[6]
Arab socialism[7][8]
Social democracy[9][10]
Revolutionary socialism[11]
Secularism[12]
Vanguardism[13]
Anti-Zionism[14]
Anti-imperialism[15][16]
Political positionCentre-left[17] or Big tent[18]
Historical:
Left-wing
Colors
  •   Red
  •   Green
  •   White
Council of the Nation
54 / 144
People's National Assembly
98 / 407
People's Provincial Assemblies
711 / 2,004
Municipalities
603 / 1,540
People's Municipal Assemblies
7,603 / 24,876
Party flag
Website
pfln.dz

The FLN was established in 1954 from a split in the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties from members of the Special Organisation paramilitary; its armed wing, the National Liberation Army, participated in the Algerian War from 1954 to 1962. After the Évian Accords of 1962, the party purged internal dissent and ruled Algeria as a one-party state. After the 1988 October Riots and the Algerian Civil War (1991–2002) against Islamist groups, the FLN was reelected to power in the 2002 Algerian legislative election, and has generally remained in power ever since, although sometimes needing to form coalitions with other parties.

History edit

Colonial era edit

The background of the FLN can be traced back to the growing anti-colonialism and Algerian nationalist sentiments since the outbreak of WWII. The repression against the Algerian Muslim population intensified as Abdelhamid Ben Badis got placed under house arrest and Marshal Pétain's government banned the Algerian Communist Party and Algerian People's Party.[20] As the war turned gradually more in favor of the Western Allies, given the US's global engagement and its ideological campaign against colonialism, the core sentiment amongst the Algerian nationalists was to use the victory in Europe to promote the independence of the country, which is reflected by the issuing of the Manifesto of the Algerian People by Ferhat Abbas.[21] As this objective failed to realize, a new party Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties (MTDL) founded by the just-released Messali Hadj started to gain momentum and took the lead in the nationalist movement.[22]

However, the Algerian Assembly's double electoral college system stipulated an equal number of 60 representation between the French settlers and the Muslim community while the Muslim community was significantly larger than the settlers.[23] The underrepresentation combined with the unfair election in 1948 limited the MTDL's ability to gain further political power.[24] Consequently, the Algerian nationalists veered to a more military approach as noted in their participation in the Special Organisation (Algeria), which is a paramilitary component of the MTLD and included the important figures in Algerian politics such Ahmed Ben Bella, Hocine Aït Ahmed, and Mohammed Boudiaf.

Later in 1951, the capture of Ahmed Ben Bella and the subsequent dismantling of the Special Organisation temporarily subdued the nationalist movement but sparkled the desire inside the Special Organisation militants to form a new organization – Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action(CRUA).[25] It initially had a five-man leadership consisting of Mostefa Ben Boulaïd, Larbi Ben M'hidi, Rabah Bitat, Mohamed Boudiaf and Mourad Didouche. They were joined by Krim Belkacem in August, and Hocine Aït Ahmed, Ahmed Ben Bella and Mohamed Khider later in the summer.[26]

 
Houari Boumediène (right), the leader of the National Liberation Army and future President of Algeria, during the war
 
National Liberation Army soldiers next to the Algerian flag

The National Liberation Front (FLN) was established on 10 October 1954.[27] It succeeded the CRUA which had been formed earlier in the year[26] because the CRUA failed to provide unity within the MTLD Party.[25] On 1 November 1954, the FLN launched the Algerian War after publishing the Declaration of 1 November 1954 written by journalist Mohamed Aïchaoui.[26] Didouche was killed on 18 January 1955, whilst both Ben Boulaïd and Bitat were captured by the French. Abane Ramdane was recruited to take control of the FLN's Algiers campaign, and went on to become one of its most effective leaders.[26] By 1956, nearly all the nationalist organizations in Algeria had joined the FLN, which had established itself as the main nationalist group through both co-opting and coercing smaller organizations; the most important group that remained outside the FLN was Messali Hadj's Algerian National Movement (MNA). At this time the FLN reorganized into something like a provisional government, consisting of a five-man executive and legislative body, and was organized territorially into six wilayas, following the Ottoman-era administrative boundaries.[28]

The FLN's armed wing during the war was called the National Liberation Army (ALN). It was divided into guerrilla units fighting France and the MNA in Algeria (and wrestling with Messali's followers over control of the expatriate community, in the "Café Wars" in France), and another, stronger component more resembling a traditional army. These units were based in neighbouring Arab countries (notably in Oujda in Morocco, and Tunisia), and although they infiltrated forces and ran weapons and supplies across the border, they generally saw less action than the rural guerrilla forces. These units were later to emerge under the leadership of army commander Colonel Houari Boumediene as a powerful opposition to the political cadres of the FLN's exile government, the GPRA, and they eventually came to dominate Algerian politics.

FLN violence edit

The Algerian war resulted in between 300,000 and 400,000 deaths. The FLN is considered responsible for over 16,000 civilians killed and over 13,000 disappeared between 1954 and 1962.[29] After the ceasefire of 19 March 1962, the FLN is thought to have massacred thousands of harkis, Muslim Algerians who had served in the French army and whom the French, contrary to promises given, had denied a "repatriation" to France.[30][31] An example of an FLN massacre is the Philippeville massacre.[32][31]

Independence and one-party state edit

The war for independence continued until March 1962, when the French government finally signed the Évian Accords, a ceasefire agreement with the FLN. In July of the same year, the Algerian people approved the cease-fire agreement with France in a referendum, supporting economic and social cooperation between the two countries as well. Full independence followed, and the FLN seized control of the country. Political opposition in the form of the MNA and Communist organizations was outlawed, and Algeria was constituted as a one-party state. The FLN became its only legal and ruling party.

Immediately after independence, the party experienced a severe internal power struggle. Political leaders coalesced into two large camps: a Political Bureau formed by the radical Ahmed Ben Bella, who was assisted by the border army, faced off against the political leadership in the former exile government; Boumédiène's army quickly put down resistance and installed Ben Bella as president. The single most powerful political constituency remained the former ALN, which had returned largely unscathed from exile and was now organized as the country's armed forces; added to this were regionally powerful guerrilla irregulars and others who jockeyed for influence in the party. In building his one-party regime, Ben Bella purged remaining dissidents (such as Ferhat Abbas), but also quickly ran into opposition from Boumédiène as he tried to assert himself independently from the army.

In 1965, the tension between Boumédiène and Ben Bella culminated in a coup d'état, after Ben Bella had tried to sack one of the Colonel's closest collaborators, Foreign Minister Abdelaziz Bouteflika (who was elected President of Algeria in 1999). A statist-socialist and anticolonial nationalist, Boumédiène ruled through decree and "revolutionary legitimacy", marginalizing the FLN in favor of his personal decision-making and the military establishment, even while retaining the one-party system. Boumédiène held tight control over party leadership until his death in 1978, at which time the party reorganized again under the leadership of the military's next candidate, Col. Chadli Bendjedid. The military remained well-represented on the FLN Central Committee and is widely thought to have been the real power-broker in the country. During the 1980s the FLN toned down the socialist content of its programme, enacting some free-market reforms and purging Boumédiène stalwarts.

Multi-party era edit

 
Logo used until 2022

It was not until 1988 that massive demonstrations and riots jolted the country towards major political reform. The riots led to the constitution being amended to allow a multi-party system. The first multi-party elections were the 1990 local elections, which saw the FLN heavily defeated by the Islamist Islamic Salvation Front (ISF), which won control of over half the local councils; the FLN received just over a quarter of the vote, retaining control of a similar number of councils. The first round of the parliamentary elections the following year saw the ISF win 188 of the 231 seats, whilst the FLN won only 16, placing third behind the Socialist Forces Front. However, shortly afterwards, due to fears of the ISF forming an Islamic state, a military coup d'état cancelled the election process and forced president Bendjedid to resign, sparking the Algerian Civil War.

Algeria was under direct military rule for several years, during which the party remained in opposition to the government during the first part of the war, notably in 1995 signing the Sant'Egidio Platform, which was highly critical of the military establishment. After internal power struggles and a leadership change, it returned to supporting the presidency. After formal democracy was restored, the FLN initially failed to regain its prominent position; in the 1997 parliamentary elections it emerged as the third-largest party, receiving 14% of the vote and winning 69 of the 231 seats. However, it won a landslide victory in the 2002 elections, winning 199 of the 389 seats.

The party nominated Ali Benflis as its candidate for the 2004 presidential elections. He finished as runner-up to the incumbent Abdelaziz Bouteflika, but received only 6.4% of the vote. In 2005 FLN formed the Presidential Alliance with the National Rally for Democracy (RND) and the Movement of Society for Peace (MSP).

The 2007 parliamentary elections saw the FLN reduced to 163 seats, although the FLN's Abdelaziz Belkhadem remained Prime Minister. Bouteflika was the party's candidate in the 2009 presidential elections, which he won with 90% of the vote.

In 2012, MSP left the Presidential Alliance and joined the Green Algeria Alliance. Despite that, the FLN remained the largest party following the 2012 parliamentary elections, winning 208 of the 462 seats. Bouteflika was re-elected on the FLN ticket in the 2014 presidential elections with 82% of the vote. The elderly and ailing Bouteflika is widely seen as a mere frontman for what has often described as a "shadowy" group of generals and intelligence officers known to the Algerians collectively as le pouvoir (“the power”) and whose individual members are called décideurs with The Economist writing in 2012 "The most powerful man in the land may be Mohamed Mediène, known as Toufiq who has headed military intelligence for two decades".[33] General Mohamed Mediène, the chief of military intelligence from 1990 to 2015 was known to be a leading décideur within le pouvior and for his secrecy with The Economist reporting on 21 September 2013: "Despite his leading role in defeating Islamic militants in a brutal civil war between 1991 and 2000, and his less public role as kingmaker in the pouvoir, General Mediene’s face remains unknown; it is said that anyone who has seen it expires soon after."[34] On 13 September 2015, it was announced that Mediène was retiring and President Bouteflika had appointed General Athmane Tartag to succeed him. Mediène's dismissal was viewed as the culmination of a long "behind-the-scenes power struggle" with Bouteflika, leaving the latter fully in charge and giving him more power to determine his own successor.[35]

In the 2017 parliamentary elections, FLN won 164 of the 462 seats, thus losing 44 seats; however, thanks to the good performance of the RND (which won 100 seats), the Presidential Alliance was able to maintain a parliamentary majority and continue to rule the country.

Relationship with Jewish Algerians edit

Jews in Algeria were given French citizenship during the colonial era starting in 1870,[36] while Muslims were denied citizenship by the French. The Jews in Algeria were seen as a go-between for French-Muslim relations; however, the lack of citizenship on behalf of the Muslims created tension between the two groups.[36] During the Algerian War, Jews felt as if they were being forced to choose sides; they were either Algerian and fighting with the FLN for independence, or they were French and fighting with the French to keep Algeria as a colony. At the start of the Algerian War, the FLN offered Jews the opportunity to join their efforts, and in return Jews would be given Algerian citizenship when Algeria won independence. Most of the Jews in Algeria sided with the French Government, much to the dismay of the FLN and their supporters.[37] During the course of the war, Jews in Algeria began to feel as if the FLN was targeting Jews and not just the French people living in Algeria. This led to increased tensions between Jews and Muslims in the area.[38] After the war, Algerian citizenship was only extended to Muslims whose fathers and grandfathers were Muslim at the time the FLN won independence from the French Government.[39] Algerian Jews were no longer considered Algerian, but they still retained French citizenship. With their French citizenship, the majority of Jews in Algeria decided to emigrate to France, with a small number of Jews deciding to emigrate to Israel and an even smaller number of Jews deciding to stay in Algeria under the rule of the FLN. Between 1961 and 1962, 130,000 out of Algeria's 140,000 Jews left for France, while around 10,000 immigrated to Israel.[40]

Ideology edit

The FLN's ideology was primarily Algerian nationalist, understood as a movement within a wider Arab nationalism and also a pan-Arab solidarity. It essentially drew its political self-legitimization from three sources: Nationalism, and the revolutionary war against France; Socialism, loosely interpreted as a popular anti-exploitation creed; Islam, defined as the main foundation for the national consciousness, and a crucial factor in solidifying the Algerian identity as separate from that of French Algerians or pied-noirs.

As the name implies, it viewed itself as a "front" composed of different social sectors and ideological trends, even if the concept of a monolithic Algerian polity gradually submerged this vision. A separate party ideology was not well developed at the time of independence, except insofar as it focused on the liberation of Algeria. This latter aspect led to the denial of or refusal to deal with the separate Berber identity held by Algerian Berbers who made up about 20% of Algeria,[41] something which caused fierce opposition and led to the splintering of the movement immediately after independence, as Hocine Aït Ahmed set up the Berberist and pro-democracy Socialist Forces Front (FFS) in Tizi Ouzou and began a rebellion in Kabylia which was defeated by the government in 1965.

Anti-colonialism and Islamism edit

Anti-Colonialism is widely considered as the core value in Algerian official discourse during its entire contemporary political and social history, especially during the formation of the FLN and later during the Islamist movement.[42] The Muslim population had been discriminated against at a constitutional level, as illustrated by the fact that French settlers formed up to 80% of the membership in three departmental councils in 1875; and at a local level, the metropolitan model composed of a major and municipal council only granted voting right to 5% of the adult male Muslim population until 1919, when the number increase to 25%.[43] Therefore, its nationalist outlook was also closely interwoven with anti-Colonialism and anti-imperialism, something which would remain a lasting characteristic of Algerian foreign policy.

Islamism pertained its dominance in Algerian politics because of the specific social contexts during different periods. The humiliating failure of the Mokrani Revolt in 1871 facilitated the pro-Islamism sentiment in the society as people generally regarded Islam as the long-lasting and never-fading symbolic opposition towards the French rule; also the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911 provoked sympathy in the Muslim community and strengthened the Islamic cultural identity and these two events together consolidated the Islamism-Colonialism opposition rhetoric.[44]

The politicization of the Islamism started with the noticeable wave of Islamic discourse led by religious scholars such as Jamal al-Din al-Afghani (1838–97), Mohammed Abduh (1849–1905) and Rashid Rida (1865–1935) that focused on resisting the foreign economic control and establishing an Islamic country based on the sharia, which were the core values of the Algerian Ulama.[45] The movement absolutely rejected atheism and was not overtly secularist, contrary to widespread perception in the West, and Islamism was perhaps the most important mobilizing ideology during the Algerian War. Still, after independence, the party would in practice assume a strongly modernist interpretation of Islam, supported the social transformation of Algerian society, the emancipation of women, etc., and worked only through secular institutions.

Before Col. Chadli Bendjedid came into power in 1971, the Islamic movement had been rather successfully monitored and subdued by the government during the previous 20 years, but the Iranian Revolution rekindled the movement and posed a greater threat to the state.[46] Since the Algerian independence, Religion had been relegated to the role of legitimizing factor for the party-regime, especially under the presidency of Col. Houari Boumédiènne (1965–78), but even then Islam was considered the state religion and a crucial part of Algerian identity, as Boumédiènne himself took pride in his Quranic training. His predecessor Ahmed Ben Bella (1962–65) was more committed to the Islamic component of the regime, although always viewed as more of an Arab nationalist than an Islamic activist (and he remains far removed from what is today referred to as Algeria's Islamists). During the mid- to late-1980s, Bendjedid reintroduced religiously conservative legislation in an attempt to appease growing Islamist opposition. During and after the Algerian Civil War, the party's position has remained that of claiming Algerian Islam as a main influence, while simultaneously arguing that this must be expressed as a progressive and modern faith, even if the party generally keeps in line with the conservative social mores of Algeria's population. It has strongly condemned the radical-fundamentalist religious teachings of the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) and other Islamist groups, even while supporting the inclusion of non-violent Islamist parties in the political system and working with them.

Arab nationalism and Pan-Arabism edit

Arab nationalism and Pan-Arabism are considered core principles of the FLN and Algerian nationalism.[47] Arab themes were glorified as the foundation of Algerian nationalism that would fit into Pan-Arabism.[48][49] Albert Camus argued that Algerian nationalism was closely tied to Nasserism and Pan-Arabism in an essay titled 'Algeria 1958'.[50] A prominent member of the Algerian independence movement, Abdel-Hamid ibn Badis (1889–1940), emphasized the Arab and Muslim character of Algeria through his Association of Algerian Muslim Ulema,[51] and famously coined the often-cited phrase: "Islam is our religion, Algeria is our homeland, Arabic is our language", while his fellow 'alim Ahmad Tawfiq al-Madani (1889–1983) wrote extensive historical writings in Arabic celebrating the Muslim and Arab ancestors of Algeria.[52]

During the Algerian war of independence, the FLN emerged as the main socialist group after uniting with several smaller independence groups, and was strongly committed to Pan-Arabism.[53] A major supporter of the Algerian independence movement was Gamal Abdel Nasser, whose mixture of Arab nationalism and revolution appealed to the Arabs in North Africa.[54] He provided financial, diplomatic and military support to the FLN, and based the Algerian provisional government in Cairo.[54] This played a major role in France's decision to wage war against him during the 1956 Suez Crisis.[55] Once Algeria gained independence in 1962, Arab nationalist leader Ahmed Ben Bella was elected president after winning elections with 99.6 per cent of the votes. He composed the Algerian constitution in October 1963, which asserted that Islam was the state religion, Arabic was the sole national and official language of the state, Algeria was an integral part of the Arab world,[56] and that Arabization was the first priority of the country to reverse French colonization.[57]

Ben Bella was succeeded by Houari Boumédiène in 1965, who also pursued Arab socialist and Pan-Arabist policies. He drafted a new Algerian constitution in 1976 which declared "the unity of the Arab people is written in the community of the destinies of these people. When there will be the conditions for a unity based on the liberation of the popular masses, Algeria will engage itself in the promotion of the formulas of union, integration or fusion that may fully respond to the legitimate and deep aspirations of the Arab people".[58] Like Ben Bella, Boumédiène imposed Arab socialism as the state ideology and declared Islam the state religion.[59] He was more assertive than Ben Bella in carrying out Arabization, especially between 1970 and 1977. The year 1971 was declared the "year of Arabization".[60] Chadli Bendjedid had talks with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi in 1988 about forming an Algeria-Libya Arab union. Instead the Arab Maghreb Union was formed in 1989.[61]

Socialism edit

A historical reference of socialist values is the implementation of the Warnier Law of 1873, which allowed the selling of community land at an individual base toppled the economic power of the Algerian indigenous elites; the elimination of class structure undertoned the later FLN populism and socialist agendas.[62] Such egalitarianism, which implies a liberation struggle, reflects the FLN's militant socialism during Ben Bella's period, who considered the struggle was to invent a new society to release the peasantry's potential.[63]

This ideological construct of the FLN is controversial and disputed but can be analyzed through lenses of different socio-economic contexts. Given the global background of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Cold War, Algeria was considered the entry point into the Third World in this ideological conflict; the FLN's ideologies under Ben Bella and Boumédiène were largely shaped by the fundamental needs of the country such as radical economic reforms, getting international aids and recognition, along with the domestic Islamic pressure.[64]

Facing the grave economic consequences of the Algerian War of Independence that included the destruction of 8,000 villages and millions of acres of land, a centralized authority, in this case, the FLN, was forced to act and redress the problem through a Leninist and corporatist framework.[65] In response, Ben Bella also experimented the socialist autogestion among the Muslim workers who entered industrial and agricultural businesses that featured profit-sharing and equity.[66] Ben Bella and his supporters in the FLN believed in the harmony between religion and socialism and it was in their political interest to renew the FLN party by leading a popular revolution to integrate Islam and socialism.[67]

Despite being challenged by the Algerian Ulema and other domestic conservatives who criticized Ben Bella on the shallowness of his intentionally Islamism-leaning policies, the FLN kept its Marxist–Leninist organization principles that featured a secular institutional dominance over religion.[68] The later FLN's ideological change towards anti-socialism and anti-communism can be illustrated by Kaid Ahmed's opposition towards Boumédiène's leftist agenda, which featured the radical agrarian revolution that hurt rich landowners who defended themselves on the religious ground and fueled the Islamic movement, which gradually took over the national sentiment later in the century.[69] Starting in 1971 and ending in 1992, the government under Chadli Bendjedid was authoritative but collegial, less rigid on ideologies but more moderate on domestic and international issues, while Bendjedid and his advisers believed in socialism.[46]

Communism edit

The organization initially committed itself to socialism, but understood this along the lines of Arab socialism, and opposed orthodox Marxism. The existence of different classes in Algerian society was generally rejected, even if several of the party's top ideologues were influenced to varying degrees by Marxist analysis.

Borrowed Marxist terminology was instead commonly reinterpreted by party radicals in terms of the conflict with France, e.g. casting the colonizer in the role of economic exploiter-oppressor as well as national enemy, while the label of "bourgeoisie" was applied to uncooperative or pro-French elites. The FLN absorbed some communist activists into its ranks during the War of Independence for pragmatic reasons but refused to allow them to organize separately from the FLN after the war. The FLN then quickly moved to dissolve the pro-Moscow Algerian Communist Party (PCA). However, since independent Algeria was set up as a one-party system under the FLN soon thereafter, many communist intellectuals were later co-opted into the regime at various stages. The cooperation occurred during the early Ben Bella and late Boumédiènne years when the Socialist Vanguard Party (PAGS), established in 1966, cooperated and tactically consulted with the FLN and recognized the FLN as the sole legitimate party in the country.[46]

Contemporary developments edit

During all periods of Algerian post-colonial history, except for a few years between 1990 and 1996, the FLN has been a pillar of the political system and has primarily been viewed as a "pro-system" party. Its role as Algeria's liberators has remained the absolute cornerstone of the party's self-perception, and the defining feature of its otherwise somewhat fluid ideology. The FLN was close to former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was made honorary chairman. It mixes its traditional populist interpretations of Algeria's nationalist-revolutionary and Islamic heritage with a pro-system conservatism, and support for gradual pro-market reform qualified by statist reflexes. Since the breakdown of the one-party system and its detachment from the state structure in ca. 1988–1990, the FLN has been in favor of multi-party democracy, whereas it upheld itself as the only organization representing the Algerian people before this period.

The FLN was admitted into Socialist International (SI) as a consultative member at the SI's spring congress on 4–5 February 2013.[70] It was expelled from the Socialist International during the 2019 protests in Algeria.

Electoral history edit

Presidential elections edit

Election Party candidate Votes % Result
1963 Ahmed Ben Bella 5,805,103 99.6% Elected  Y
1976 Houari Boumediene 7,976,568 99.5% Elected  Y
1979 Chadli Bendjedid 7,736,697 99.4% Elected  Y
1984 9,664,168 99.42% Elected  Y
1988 10,603,067 93.26% Elected  Y
1995 Boycotted
1999 Abdelaziz Bouteflika 7,445,045 73.8% Elected  Y
2004 Ali Benflis 653,951 6.42% Lost  N
2009 Abdelaziz Bouteflika 12,911,705 90.24% Elected  Y
2014 8,332,598 81.53% Elected  Y
2019 Did not run

People's National Assembly elections edit

Election Party leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Governing?
1962 Ahmed Ben Bella 5,267,324 99.7%
196 / 196
  196   1st Sole legal party
1964 4,493,416 87.0%
196 / 196
    1st Sole legal party
1977 Houari Boumediene 6,037,537 75.84%
261 / 261
  65   1st Sole legal party
1982 Chadli Bendjedid 6,054,740 100%
282 / 282
  21   1st Sole legal party
1987 9,910,631 100%
295 / 295
  13   1st Sole legal party
1997 Boualem Benhamouda 1,497,285 14.3%
62 / 380
  233   3rd Yes
2002 Abdelaziz Bouteflika 2.618.003 34.3%
199 / 389
  137   1st Yes
2007 1,315,686 22.98%
136 / 386
  63   1st Yes
2012 Abdelmalek Sellal 1,324,363 17.35%
208 / 462
  72   1st Yes
2017 Djamel Ould Abbes 1,681,321 25.99%
164 / 462
  44   1st Yes
2021 Abou El Fadhel Baadji 287,828 22.61%
98 / 407
  66   1st Yes

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Arabic: ج ت و, romanizedJTW

References edit

  1. ^ Boudjedri, Mounia (November 13, 2023). "Abdelkrim Benmbarek plébiscité nouveau secrétaire général du parti FLN". Algeria Press Service (in French). from the original on November 14, 2023. Retrieved November 13, 2023.
  2. ^ Sloan, Stephen; Anderson, Sean K. (2009-08-03). Historical Dictionary of Terrorism. Scarecrow Press. p. 474. ISBN 978-0-8108-6311-8. The Front de Libération Nationale is an Algerian nationalist party that engaged in guerrilla warfare and terrorist attacks on the French colonial government to obtain independence for Algerian Arabs.
  3. ^ Goldsmith, Melissa Ursula Dawn; Fonseca, Anthony J. (2018-12-01). Hip Hop around the World: An Encyclopedia. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. pp. xvii. ISBN 979-8-216-09618-4. The war broke out because of conflict between the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), an Islamic fundamentalist party, and the ruling National Liberation Front (FLN), an Algerian and Arab nationalist democratic socialist party.
  4. ^ Esposito, John L. (1998-08-01). Islam and Politics: Fourth Edition. Syracuse University Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-8156-2774-6. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, radical Arab regimes had come to power in Syria, Iraq, and Algeria as well as in Egypt. Western-inspired liberal governments were indicted for the continuance of feudal societies in the Middle East. The Failure of liberal nationalism and the influence of Western capitalism and imperialism were denounced by the new regimes with promises of a social revolution to redress the profound socioeconomic inequities of their societies. Rejecting a "feudal past" and a Western capitalist present, the Baath Party in Syria and Iraq, the Front de Liberation Nationale (FLN) in Algeria, and Nasser in Egypt advocated an Arab nationalist/socialist future—Arab socialism.
  5. ^ Guidère, Mathieu (2017-09-20). Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-5381-0670-9. Ideologically, the FLN sought Pan-Arab nationalism throughout Algeria using Islam to attain national consciousness and solidarity. The founding anti-imperialist doctrines of the FLN continued to remain at the core even after Algeria's independence and have affected the country's foreign policies.
  6. ^ Guidère, Mathieu (2017-09-20). Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-5381-0670-9. Ideologically, the FLN sought Pan-Arab nationalism throughout Algeria using Islam to attain national consciousness and solidarity. The founding anti-imperialist doctrines of the FLN continued to remain at the core even after Algeria's independence and have affected the country's foreign policies.
  7. ^ Badie, Bertrand (2018-06-29). New Perspectives on the International Order: No Longer Alone in This World. Springer. p. 113. ISBN 978-3-319-94286-5. The FLN's motivational ideology, nationalism tinged with Arab socialism, was soon turned into ordinary bureaucratic and military authoritarianism, undermining the government's legitimacy in the eyes of the people, who soon turned toward other horizons.
  8. ^ Esposito, John L. (1998-08-01). Islam and Politics: Fourth Edition. Syracuse University Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-8156-2774-6. During the late 1950s and early 1960s, radical Arab regimes had come to power in Syria, Iraq, and Algeria as well as in Egypt. Western-inspired liberal governments were indicted for the continuance of feudal societies in the Middle East. The Failure of liberal nationalism and the influence of Western capitalism and imperialism were denounced by the new regimes with promises of a social revolution to redress the profound socioeconomic inequities of their societies. Rejecting a "feudal past" and a Western capitalist present, the Baath Party in Syria and Iraq, the Front de Liberation Nationale (FLN) in Algeria, and Nasser in Egypt advocated an Arab nationalist/socialist future—Arab socialism.
  9. ^ Shillington, Kevin (2005). Encyclopedia of African History: A - G.. 1. Taylor & Francis. p. 101. ISBN 978-1-57958-245-6. The Algerian War for Independence began on November 1, 1954, when the FLN (Front de Liberation Nationale, or National Liberation Front), a group advocating for social democracy within an Islamic framework, called upon all Algerians to rise up against French authority and fight for total independence for Algeria.
  10. ^ Goldsmith, Melissa Ursula Dawn; Fonseca, Anthony J. (2018-12-01). Hip Hop around the World: An Encyclopedia. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. pp. xvii. ISBN 979-8-216-09618-4. The war broke out because of conflict between the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), an Islamic fundamentalist party, and the ruling National Liberation Front (FLN), an Algerian and Arab nationalist democratic socialist party.
  11. ^ Nyrop, Richard F.; Studies, American University (Washington, D. C. ) Foreign Area (1972). Area Handbook for Algeria. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 233. From its birth as an independent state, Algeria's foreign policies were based on a realistic recognition of the need for economic assistance as well as on the government's revolutionary, socialist ideology, which pervaded all levels of policy formulation.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Harmon, Stephen A. (2016-03-09). Terror and Insurgency in the Sahara-Sahel Region: Corruption, Contraband, Jihad and the Mali War of 2012-2013. Routledge. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-317-04606-6. While the FLN always had Islamic overtones, it was from the start a secular-nationalist liberation movement on the Nasser model.
  13. ^ Entelis, John P. (2016-01-08). Algeria: The Revolution Institutionalized. Routledge. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-317-36098-8. According to Part 2 of the National Charter, the FLN is officially given a vanguard role in Algerian politics and society. Organized along recognizably Leninist lines, the FLN is, in theory, "the supreme mobilizer of the masses, guardian of ideological standards, watchdog over bureaucratic excesses and deviations, and arbiter of policy.
  14. ^ Ma'oz, Moshe (2020-09-10). Jews, Muslims and Jerusalem: Disputes and Dialogues. Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-78284-701-4. After the 1967 War against Israel (also called the Six-Day War), nearly all the synagogues in Algeria were confiscated and were transformed into mosques. Of the 120,000 Jews in Algeria in the 1940s, only 1000 remained in 1969, and about 50 in the 1990s. The Algerian governments since then have taken an anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian stand for many years.
  15. ^ Bucaille, Laetitia (2019-06-14). Making Peace with Your Enemy: Algerian, French, and South African Ex-Combatants. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8122-5110-4. Moreover, Algerian leaders asserted the glorious character of the victory over colonialisms, emphasizing the paucity of the FLN's resources and the power of the French state, to underscore the remarkable determination, courage and spirit of sacrifice of Algerian combatants. Houari Boumediene kept this spirit of resistance alive by adopting an anti-imperialist stance on the international scene; Algeria remained mobilized against the neocolonial temptations of France and the arrogance of the great powers.
  16. ^ Guidère, Mathieu (2017-09-20). Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-5381-0670-9. Ideologically, the FLN sought Pan-Arab nationalism throughout Algeria using Islam to attain national consciousness and solidarity. The founding anti-imperialist doctrines of the FLN continued to remain at the core even after Algeria's independence and have affected the country's foreign policies.
  17. ^ "National Liberation Front Party". Observatorio Electoral. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
  18. ^ Serres, Thomas (16 November 2016). "Quick Thoughts: Thomas Serres on the Algerian Succession". Jadaliyya (Interview). Arab Studies Institute. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  19. ^ Europa World Year Book 2014, p. 565.
  20. ^ Evans, M. (2007). Algeria : Anger of the Dispossessed. London: Yale University Press, p. 49.
  21. ^ Evans (2007). Algeria : Anger of the Dispossessed, p. 50.
  22. ^ Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Ahmed Messali Hadj". Encyclopædia Britannica. January 01, 2019. Retrieved April 22, 2019.
  23. ^ Spencer, William. "Freedom and Unity in Algeria." World Affairs 121, no. 2 (1958): 35-37. JSTOR 20669518.
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  25. ^ a b McDougall, James. A History of Algeria New York: Cambridge University Press, 2017. p. 194
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  28. ^ S. N. Millar, "Arab Victory: Lessons from the Algerian War (1954–62)", British Army Review, No. 145, Autumn 2008, p. 49.
  29. ^ This number is given in the French Wikipedia, fr:Guerre d'Algérie, §7.1 (Bilan humain) in a reference to: Guy Pervillé, "La guerre d'Algérie en face", L'Histoire, no. 331, May 2008, p. 96.
  30. ^ (in French) 2005. Ministère de la Défense; Secrétariat général pour l'administration; Cahiers du Centre d'études d'histoire de la défense. Page 48. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
  31. ^ a b Horne, Alistair, A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954–1962 (1977).
  32. ^ Thomas, Martin; Moore, Bob; Butler, Larry (23 April 2015). Crises of Empire: Decolonization and Europe's Imperial States. ISBN 9781472531216.
  33. ^ "Still Waiting for Real Democracy". The Economist. 12 May 2012. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  34. ^ "The dead live longer". The Economist. 21 September 2013.
  35. ^ "Algeria president paving way for succession". news.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2020-09-05.
  36. ^ a b "The Jews of Algeria » 23 Feb 1962 » The Spectator Archive". The Spectator Archive. Retrieved 2018-04-15.
  37. ^ FLN. "Appeal of the FLN to Our Israelite Compatriots by FLN Algeria 1956". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 2018-04-15.
  38. ^ "Algerian Jews During the French-Algerian War | Dissertation Reviews". dissertationreviews.org. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 2018-04-15.
  39. ^ Algerian Nationality Code, Law no. 63-69 of Mar. 27, 1963, section 34
  40. ^ Ethan Katz (2015). The Burdens of Brotherhood Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France. Harvard University Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-674-08868-9.
  41. ^ Egger, Vernon O. (2018-05-01). A History of the Muslim World since 1260: The Making of a Global Community. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-72474-6.
  42. ^ Evans (2007). Algeria : Anger of the Dispossessed, p. 27.
  43. ^ Evans (2007). Algeria : Anger of the Dispossessed, p. 33.
  44. ^ Evans (2007). Algeria : Anger of the Dispossessed, p. 41.
  45. ^ Evans (2007). Algeria : Anger of the Dispossessed, p. 43.
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  47. ^ Foran, John (2005-11-17). Taking Power: On the Origins of Third World Revolutions. Cambridge University Press. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-139-44518-4.
  48. ^ Anderson, John (2013-09-13). Religion, Democracy and Democratization. Routledge. p. 125. ISBN 978-1-317-99903-4.
  49. ^ Berger, Anne-Emmanuelle (2002). Algeria in Others' Languages. Cornell University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-8014-3919-3.
  50. ^ Ahluwalia, Pal (2010-04-05). Out of Africa: Post-Structuralism's Colonial Roots. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-16179-8.
  51. ^ Studies, American University (Washington, D. C. ) Foreign Area (1979). Algeria, a Country Study. [Department of Defense], Department of the Army. p. 347.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  52. ^ Crowley, Patrick (2017). Algeria: Nation, Culture and Transnationalism, 1988-2015. Oxford University Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-1-78694-021-6.
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  55. ^ Anas, Abdullah; Hussein, Tam (2019). To the Mountains: My Life in Jihad, from Algeria to Afghanistan. Oxford University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-78738-011-0.
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website (in Arabic)

national, liberation, front, algeria, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, correspondi. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources National Liberation Front Algeria news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The National Liberation Front Arabic جبهة التحرير الوطني romanized Jabhatu l Taḥriri l Waṭani French Front de liberation nationale commonly known by its French acronym FLN a is a nationalist political party in Algeria It was the principal nationalist movement during the Algerian War and the sole legal and ruling political party of the Algerian state until other parties were legalised in 1989 19 National Liberation Front جبهة التحرير الوطنيAbbreviationFLNSecretary GeneralAbdelkrim Benmbarek 1 Founded23 October 1954 69 years ago 1954 10 23 Preceded byCRUAHeadquartersAlgiersIdeologyAlgerian nationalism 2 Arab nationalism 3 4 5 Pan Arabism 6 Arab socialism 7 8 Social democracy 9 10 Revolutionary socialism 11 Secularism 12 Vanguardism 13 Anti Zionism 14 Anti imperialism 15 16 Political positionCentre left 17 or Big tent 18 Historical Left wingColors Red Green WhiteCouncil of the Nation54 144People s National Assembly98 407People s Provincial Assemblies711 2 004Municipalities603 1 540People s Municipal Assemblies7 603 24 876Party flagWebsitepfln wbr dzPolitics of AlgeriaPolitical partiesElectionsThe FLN was established in 1954 from a split in the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties from members of the Special Organisation paramilitary its armed wing the National Liberation Army participated in the Algerian War from 1954 to 1962 After the Evian Accords of 1962 the party purged internal dissent and ruled Algeria as a one party state After the 1988 October Riots and the Algerian Civil War 1991 2002 against Islamist groups the FLN was reelected to power in the 2002 Algerian legislative election and has generally remained in power ever since although sometimes needing to form coalitions with other parties Contents 1 History 1 1 Colonial era 1 1 1 FLN violence 1 2 Independence and one party state 1 3 Multi party era 1 3 1 Relationship with Jewish Algerians 2 Ideology 2 1 Anti colonialism and Islamism 2 2 Arab nationalism and Pan Arabism 2 3 Socialism 2 4 Communism 2 5 Contemporary developments 3 Electoral history 3 1 Presidential elections 3 2 People s National Assembly elections 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editColonial era edit Main article Declaration of 1 November 1954 The background of the FLN can be traced back to the growing anti colonialism and Algerian nationalist sentiments since the outbreak of WWII The repression against the Algerian Muslim population intensified as Abdelhamid Ben Badis got placed under house arrest and Marshal Petain s government banned the Algerian Communist Party and Algerian People s Party 20 As the war turned gradually more in favor of the Western Allies given the US s global engagement and its ideological campaign against colonialism the core sentiment amongst the Algerian nationalists was to use the victory in Europe to promote the independence of the country which is reflected by the issuing of the Manifesto of the Algerian People by Ferhat Abbas 21 As this objective failed to realize a new party Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties MTDL founded by the just released Messali Hadj started to gain momentum and took the lead in the nationalist movement 22 However the Algerian Assembly s double electoral college system stipulated an equal number of 60 representation between the French settlers and the Muslim community while the Muslim community was significantly larger than the settlers 23 The underrepresentation combined with the unfair election in 1948 limited the MTDL s ability to gain further political power 24 Consequently the Algerian nationalists veered to a more military approach as noted in their participation in the Special Organisation Algeria which is a paramilitary component of the MTLD and included the important figures in Algerian politics such Ahmed Ben Bella Hocine Ait Ahmed and Mohammed Boudiaf Later in 1951 the capture of Ahmed Ben Bella and the subsequent dismantling of the Special Organisation temporarily subdued the nationalist movement but sparkled the desire inside the Special Organisation militants to form a new organization Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action CRUA 25 It initially had a five man leadership consisting of Mostefa Ben Boulaid Larbi Ben M hidi Rabah Bitat Mohamed Boudiaf and Mourad Didouche They were joined by Krim Belkacem in August and Hocine Ait Ahmed Ahmed Ben Bella and Mohamed Khider later in the summer 26 nbsp Houari Boumediene right the leader of the National Liberation Army and future President of Algeria during the war nbsp National Liberation Army soldiers next to the Algerian flagThe National Liberation Front FLN was established on 10 October 1954 27 It succeeded the CRUA which had been formed earlier in the year 26 because the CRUA failed to provide unity within the MTLD Party 25 On 1 November 1954 the FLN launched the Algerian War after publishing the Declaration of 1 November 1954 written by journalist Mohamed Aichaoui 26 Didouche was killed on 18 January 1955 whilst both Ben Boulaid and Bitat were captured by the French Abane Ramdane was recruited to take control of the FLN s Algiers campaign and went on to become one of its most effective leaders 26 By 1956 nearly all the nationalist organizations in Algeria had joined the FLN which had established itself as the main nationalist group through both co opting and coercing smaller organizations the most important group that remained outside the FLN was Messali Hadj s Algerian National Movement MNA At this time the FLN reorganized into something like a provisional government consisting of a five man executive and legislative body and was organized territorially into six wilayas following the Ottoman era administrative boundaries 28 The FLN s armed wing during the war was called the National Liberation Army ALN It was divided into guerrilla units fighting France and the MNA in Algeria and wrestling with Messali s followers over control of the expatriate community in the Cafe Wars in France and another stronger component more resembling a traditional army These units were based in neighbouring Arab countries notably in Oujda in Morocco and Tunisia and although they infiltrated forces and ran weapons and supplies across the border they generally saw less action than the rural guerrilla forces These units were later to emerge under the leadership of army commander Colonel Houari Boumediene as a powerful opposition to the political cadres of the FLN s exile government the GPRA and they eventually came to dominate Algerian politics FLN violence edit The Algerian war resulted in between 300 000 and 400 000 deaths The FLN is considered responsible for over 16 000 civilians killed and over 13 000 disappeared between 1954 and 1962 29 After the ceasefire of 19 March 1962 the FLN is thought to have massacred thousands of harkis Muslim Algerians who had served in the French army and whom the French contrary to promises given had denied a repatriation to France 30 31 An example of an FLN massacre is the Philippeville massacre 32 31 Independence and one party state edit The war for independence continued until March 1962 when the French government finally signed the Evian Accords a ceasefire agreement with the FLN In July of the same year the Algerian people approved the cease fire agreement with France in a referendum supporting economic and social cooperation between the two countries as well Full independence followed and the FLN seized control of the country Political opposition in the form of the MNA and Communist organizations was outlawed and Algeria was constituted as a one party state The FLN became its only legal and ruling party Immediately after independence the party experienced a severe internal power struggle Political leaders coalesced into two large camps a Political Bureau formed by the radical Ahmed Ben Bella who was assisted by the border army faced off against the political leadership in the former exile government Boumediene s army quickly put down resistance and installed Ben Bella as president The single most powerful political constituency remained the former ALN which had returned largely unscathed from exile and was now organized as the country s armed forces added to this were regionally powerful guerrilla irregulars and others who jockeyed for influence in the party In building his one party regime Ben Bella purged remaining dissidents such as Ferhat Abbas but also quickly ran into opposition from Boumediene as he tried to assert himself independently from the army In 1965 the tension between Boumediene and Ben Bella culminated in a coup d etat after Ben Bella had tried to sack one of the Colonel s closest collaborators Foreign Minister Abdelaziz Bouteflika who was elected President of Algeria in 1999 A statist socialist and anticolonial nationalist Boumediene ruled through decree and revolutionary legitimacy marginalizing the FLN in favor of his personal decision making and the military establishment even while retaining the one party system Boumediene held tight control over party leadership until his death in 1978 at which time the party reorganized again under the leadership of the military s next candidate Col Chadli Bendjedid The military remained well represented on the FLN Central Committee and is widely thought to have been the real power broker in the country During the 1980s the FLN toned down the socialist content of its programme enacting some free market reforms and purging Boumediene stalwarts Multi party era edit nbsp Logo used until 2022It was not until 1988 that massive demonstrations and riots jolted the country towards major political reform The riots led to the constitution being amended to allow a multi party system The first multi party elections were the 1990 local elections which saw the FLN heavily defeated by the Islamist Islamic Salvation Front ISF which won control of over half the local councils the FLN received just over a quarter of the vote retaining control of a similar number of councils The first round of the parliamentary elections the following year saw the ISF win 188 of the 231 seats whilst the FLN won only 16 placing third behind the Socialist Forces Front However shortly afterwards due to fears of the ISF forming an Islamic state a military coup d etat cancelled the election process and forced president Bendjedid to resign sparking the Algerian Civil War Algeria was under direct military rule for several years during which the party remained in opposition to the government during the first part of the war notably in 1995 signing the Sant Egidio Platform which was highly critical of the military establishment After internal power struggles and a leadership change it returned to supporting the presidency After formal democracy was restored the FLN initially failed to regain its prominent position in the 1997 parliamentary elections it emerged as the third largest party receiving 14 of the vote and winning 69 of the 231 seats However it won a landslide victory in the 2002 elections winning 199 of the 389 seats The party nominated Ali Benflis as its candidate for the 2004 presidential elections He finished as runner up to the incumbent Abdelaziz Bouteflika but received only 6 4 of the vote In 2005 FLN formed the Presidential Alliance with the National Rally for Democracy RND and the Movement of Society for Peace MSP The 2007 parliamentary elections saw the FLN reduced to 163 seats although the FLN s Abdelaziz Belkhadem remained Prime Minister Bouteflika was the party s candidate in the 2009 presidential elections which he won with 90 of the vote In 2012 MSP left the Presidential Alliance and joined the Green Algeria Alliance Despite that the FLN remained the largest party following the 2012 parliamentary elections winning 208 of the 462 seats Bouteflika was re elected on the FLN ticket in the 2014 presidential elections with 82 of the vote The elderly and ailing Bouteflika is widely seen as a mere frontman for what has often described as a shadowy group of generals and intelligence officers known to the Algerians collectively as le pouvoir the power and whose individual members are called decideurs with The Economist writing in 2012 The most powerful man in the land may be Mohamed Mediene known as Toufiq who has headed military intelligence for two decades 33 General Mohamed Mediene the chief of military intelligence from 1990 to 2015 was known to be a leading decideur within le pouvior and for his secrecy with The Economist reporting on 21 September 2013 Despite his leading role in defeating Islamic militants in a brutal civil war between 1991 and 2000 and his less public role as kingmaker in the pouvoir General Mediene s face remains unknown it is said that anyone who has seen it expires soon after 34 On 13 September 2015 it was announced that Mediene was retiring and President Bouteflika had appointed General Athmane Tartag to succeed him Mediene s dismissal was viewed as the culmination of a long behind the scenes power struggle with Bouteflika leaving the latter fully in charge and giving him more power to determine his own successor 35 In the 2017 parliamentary elections FLN won 164 of the 462 seats thus losing 44 seats however thanks to the good performance of the RND which won 100 seats the Presidential Alliance was able to maintain a parliamentary majority and continue to rule the country Relationship with Jewish Algerians edit Jews in Algeria were given French citizenship during the colonial era starting in 1870 36 while Muslims were denied citizenship by the French The Jews in Algeria were seen as a go between for French Muslim relations however the lack of citizenship on behalf of the Muslims created tension between the two groups 36 During the Algerian War Jews felt as if they were being forced to choose sides they were either Algerian and fighting with the FLN for independence or they were French and fighting with the French to keep Algeria as a colony At the start of the Algerian War the FLN offered Jews the opportunity to join their efforts and in return Jews would be given Algerian citizenship when Algeria won independence Most of the Jews in Algeria sided with the French Government much to the dismay of the FLN and their supporters 37 During the course of the war Jews in Algeria began to feel as if the FLN was targeting Jews and not just the French people living in Algeria This led to increased tensions between Jews and Muslims in the area 38 After the war Algerian citizenship was only extended to Muslims whose fathers and grandfathers were Muslim at the time the FLN won independence from the French Government 39 Algerian Jews were no longer considered Algerian but they still retained French citizenship With their French citizenship the majority of Jews in Algeria decided to emigrate to France with a small number of Jews deciding to emigrate to Israel and an even smaller number of Jews deciding to stay in Algeria under the rule of the FLN Between 1961 and 1962 130 000 out of Algeria s 140 000 Jews left for France while around 10 000 immigrated to Israel 40 Ideology editThe FLN s ideology was primarily Algerian nationalist understood as a movement within a wider Arab nationalism and also a pan Arab solidarity It essentially drew its political self legitimization from three sources Nationalism and the revolutionary war against France Socialism loosely interpreted as a popular anti exploitation creed Islam defined as the main foundation for the national consciousness and a crucial factor in solidifying the Algerian identity as separate from that of French Algerians or pied noirs As the name implies it viewed itself as a front composed of different social sectors and ideological trends even if the concept of a monolithic Algerian polity gradually submerged this vision A separate party ideology was not well developed at the time of independence except insofar as it focused on the liberation of Algeria This latter aspect led to the denial of or refusal to deal with the separate Berber identity held by Algerian Berbers who made up about 20 of Algeria 41 something which caused fierce opposition and led to the splintering of the movement immediately after independence as Hocine Ait Ahmed set up the Berberist and pro democracy Socialist Forces Front FFS in Tizi Ouzou and began a rebellion in Kabylia which was defeated by the government in 1965 Anti colonialism and Islamism edit Anti Colonialism is widely considered as the core value in Algerian official discourse during its entire contemporary political and social history especially during the formation of the FLN and later during the Islamist movement 42 The Muslim population had been discriminated against at a constitutional level as illustrated by the fact that French settlers formed up to 80 of the membership in three departmental councils in 1875 and at a local level the metropolitan model composed of a major and municipal council only granted voting right to 5 of the adult male Muslim population until 1919 when the number increase to 25 43 Therefore its nationalist outlook was also closely interwoven with anti Colonialism and anti imperialism something which would remain a lasting characteristic of Algerian foreign policy Islamism pertained its dominance in Algerian politics because of the specific social contexts during different periods The humiliating failure of the Mokrani Revolt in 1871 facilitated the pro Islamism sentiment in the society as people generally regarded Islam as the long lasting and never fading symbolic opposition towards the French rule also the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911 provoked sympathy in the Muslim community and strengthened the Islamic cultural identity and these two events together consolidated the Islamism Colonialism opposition rhetoric 44 The politicization of the Islamism started with the noticeable wave of Islamic discourse led by religious scholars such as Jamal al Din al Afghani 1838 97 Mohammed Abduh 1849 1905 and Rashid Rida 1865 1935 that focused on resisting the foreign economic control and establishing an Islamic country based on the sharia which were the core values of the Algerian Ulama 45 The movement absolutely rejected atheism and was not overtly secularist contrary to widespread perception in the West and Islamism was perhaps the most important mobilizing ideology during the Algerian War Still after independence the party would in practice assume a strongly modernist interpretation of Islam supported the social transformation of Algerian society the emancipation of women etc and worked only through secular institutions Before Col Chadli Bendjedid came into power in 1971 the Islamic movement had been rather successfully monitored and subdued by the government during the previous 20 years but the Iranian Revolution rekindled the movement and posed a greater threat to the state 46 Since the Algerian independence Religion had been relegated to the role of legitimizing factor for the party regime especially under the presidency of Col Houari Boumedienne 1965 78 but even then Islam was considered the state religion and a crucial part of Algerian identity as Boumedienne himself took pride in his Quranic training His predecessor Ahmed Ben Bella 1962 65 was more committed to the Islamic component of the regime although always viewed as more of an Arab nationalist than an Islamic activist and he remains far removed from what is today referred to as Algeria s Islamists During the mid to late 1980s Bendjedid reintroduced religiously conservative legislation in an attempt to appease growing Islamist opposition During and after the Algerian Civil War the party s position has remained that of claiming Algerian Islam as a main influence while simultaneously arguing that this must be expressed as a progressive and modern faith even if the party generally keeps in line with the conservative social mores of Algeria s population It has strongly condemned the radical fundamentalist religious teachings of the Islamic Salvation Front FIS and other Islamist groups even while supporting the inclusion of non violent Islamist parties in the political system and working with them Arab nationalism and Pan Arabism edit Arab nationalism and Pan Arabism are considered core principles of the FLN and Algerian nationalism 47 Arab themes were glorified as the foundation of Algerian nationalism that would fit into Pan Arabism 48 49 Albert Camus argued that Algerian nationalism was closely tied to Nasserism and Pan Arabism in an essay titled Algeria 1958 50 A prominent member of the Algerian independence movement Abdel Hamid ibn Badis 1889 1940 emphasized the Arab and Muslim character of Algeria through his Association of Algerian Muslim Ulema 51 and famously coined the often cited phrase Islam is our religion Algeria is our homeland Arabic is our language while his fellow alim Ahmad Tawfiq al Madani 1889 1983 wrote extensive historical writings in Arabic celebrating the Muslim and Arab ancestors of Algeria 52 During the Algerian war of independence the FLN emerged as the main socialist group after uniting with several smaller independence groups and was strongly committed to Pan Arabism 53 A major supporter of the Algerian independence movement was Gamal Abdel Nasser whose mixture of Arab nationalism and revolution appealed to the Arabs in North Africa 54 He provided financial diplomatic and military support to the FLN and based the Algerian provisional government in Cairo 54 This played a major role in France s decision to wage war against him during the 1956 Suez Crisis 55 Once Algeria gained independence in 1962 Arab nationalist leader Ahmed Ben Bella was elected president after winning elections with 99 6 per cent of the votes He composed the Algerian constitution in October 1963 which asserted that Islam was the state religion Arabic was the sole national and official language of the state Algeria was an integral part of the Arab world 56 and that Arabization was the first priority of the country to reverse French colonization 57 Ben Bella was succeeded by Houari Boumediene in 1965 who also pursued Arab socialist and Pan Arabist policies He drafted a new Algerian constitution in 1976 which declared the unity of the Arab people is written in the community of the destinies of these people When there will be the conditions for a unity based on the liberation of the popular masses Algeria will engage itself in the promotion of the formulas of union integration or fusion that may fully respond to the legitimate and deep aspirations of the Arab people 58 Like Ben Bella Boumediene imposed Arab socialism as the state ideology and declared Islam the state religion 59 He was more assertive than Ben Bella in carrying out Arabization especially between 1970 and 1977 The year 1971 was declared the year of Arabization 60 Chadli Bendjedid had talks with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi in 1988 about forming an Algeria Libya Arab union Instead the Arab Maghreb Union was formed in 1989 61 Socialism edit A historical reference of socialist values is the implementation of the Warnier Law of 1873 which allowed the selling of community land at an individual base toppled the economic power of the Algerian indigenous elites the elimination of class structure undertoned the later FLN populism and socialist agendas 62 Such egalitarianism which implies a liberation struggle reflects the FLN s militant socialism during Ben Bella s period who considered the struggle was to invent a new society to release the peasantry s potential 63 This ideological construct of the FLN is controversial and disputed but can be analyzed through lenses of different socio economic contexts Given the global background of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Cold War Algeria was considered the entry point into the Third World in this ideological conflict the FLN s ideologies under Ben Bella and Boumediene were largely shaped by the fundamental needs of the country such as radical economic reforms getting international aids and recognition along with the domestic Islamic pressure 64 Facing the grave economic consequences of the Algerian War of Independence that included the destruction of 8 000 villages and millions of acres of land a centralized authority in this case the FLN was forced to act and redress the problem through a Leninist and corporatist framework 65 In response Ben Bella also experimented the socialist autogestion among the Muslim workers who entered industrial and agricultural businesses that featured profit sharing and equity 66 Ben Bella and his supporters in the FLN believed in the harmony between religion and socialism and it was in their political interest to renew the FLN party by leading a popular revolution to integrate Islam and socialism 67 Despite being challenged by the Algerian Ulema and other domestic conservatives who criticized Ben Bella on the shallowness of his intentionally Islamism leaning policies the FLN kept its Marxist Leninist organization principles that featured a secular institutional dominance over religion 68 The later FLN s ideological change towards anti socialism and anti communism can be illustrated by Kaid Ahmed s opposition towards Boumediene s leftist agenda which featured the radical agrarian revolution that hurt rich landowners who defended themselves on the religious ground and fueled the Islamic movement which gradually took over the national sentiment later in the century 69 Starting in 1971 and ending in 1992 the government under Chadli Bendjedid was authoritative but collegial less rigid on ideologies but more moderate on domestic and international issues while Bendjedid and his advisers believed in socialism 46 Communism edit The organization initially committed itself to socialism but understood this along the lines of Arab socialism and opposed orthodox Marxism The existence of different classes in Algerian society was generally rejected even if several of the party s top ideologues were influenced to varying degrees by Marxist analysis Borrowed Marxist terminology was instead commonly reinterpreted by party radicals in terms of the conflict with France e g casting the colonizer in the role of economic exploiter oppressor as well as national enemy while the label of bourgeoisie was applied to uncooperative or pro French elites The FLN absorbed some communist activists into its ranks during the War of Independence for pragmatic reasons but refused to allow them to organize separately from the FLN after the war The FLN then quickly moved to dissolve the pro Moscow Algerian Communist Party PCA However since independent Algeria was set up as a one party system under the FLN soon thereafter many communist intellectuals were later co opted into the regime at various stages The cooperation occurred during the early Ben Bella and late Boumedienne years when the Socialist Vanguard Party PAGS established in 1966 cooperated and tactically consulted with the FLN and recognized the FLN as the sole legitimate party in the country 46 Contemporary developments edit During all periods of Algerian post colonial history except for a few years between 1990 and 1996 the FLN has been a pillar of the political system and has primarily been viewed as a pro system party Its role as Algeria s liberators has remained the absolute cornerstone of the party s self perception and the defining feature of its otherwise somewhat fluid ideology The FLN was close to former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika who was made honorary chairman It mixes its traditional populist interpretations of Algeria s nationalist revolutionary and Islamic heritage with a pro system conservatism and support for gradual pro market reform qualified by statist reflexes Since the breakdown of the one party system and its detachment from the state structure in ca 1988 1990 the FLN has been in favor of multi party democracy whereas it upheld itself as the only organization representing the Algerian people before this period The FLN was admitted into Socialist International SI as a consultative member at the SI s spring congress on 4 5 February 2013 70 It was expelled from the Socialist International during the 2019 protests in Algeria Electoral history editPresidential elections edit Election Party candidate Votes Result1963 Ahmed Ben Bella 5 805 103 99 6 Elected nbsp Y1976 Houari Boumediene 7 976 568 99 5 Elected nbsp Y1979 Chadli Bendjedid 7 736 697 99 4 Elected nbsp Y1984 9 664 168 99 42 Elected nbsp Y1988 10 603 067 93 26 Elected nbsp Y1995 Boycotted1999 Abdelaziz Bouteflika 7 445 045 73 8 Elected nbsp Y2004 Ali Benflis 653 951 6 42 Lost nbsp N2009 Abdelaziz Bouteflika 12 911 705 90 24 Elected nbsp Y2014 8 332 598 81 53 Elected nbsp Y2019 Did not runPeople s National Assembly elections edit Election Party leader Votes Seats Position Governing 1962 Ahmed Ben Bella 5 267 324 99 7 196 196 nbsp 196 nbsp 1st Sole legal party1964 4 493 416 87 0 196 196 nbsp nbsp 1st Sole legal party1977 Houari Boumediene 6 037 537 75 84 261 261 nbsp 65 nbsp 1st Sole legal party1982 Chadli Bendjedid 6 054 740 100 282 282 nbsp 21 nbsp 1st Sole legal party1987 9 910 631 100 295 295 nbsp 13 nbsp 1st Sole legal party1997 Boualem Benhamouda 1 497 285 14 3 62 380 nbsp 233 nbsp 3rd Yes2002 Abdelaziz Bouteflika 2 618 003 34 3 199 389 nbsp 137 nbsp 1st Yes2007 1 315 686 22 98 136 386 nbsp 63 nbsp 1st Yes2012 Abdelmalek Sellal 1 324 363 17 35 208 462 nbsp 72 nbsp 1st Yes2017 Djamel Ould Abbes 1 681 321 25 99 164 462 nbsp 44 nbsp 1st Yes2021 Abou El Fadhel Baadji 287 828 22 61 98 407 nbsp 66 nbsp 1st YesSee also editFrench rule in Algeria 1830 1962 The Wretched of the Earth The Battle of Algiers Frantz Fanon Jeanson networkNotes edit Arabic ج ت و romanized JTWReferences edit Boudjedri Mounia November 13 2023 Abdelkrim Benmbarek plebiscite nouveau secretaire general du parti FLN Algeria Press Service in French Archived from the original on November 14 2023 Retrieved November 13 2023 Sloan Stephen Anderson Sean K 2009 08 03 Historical Dictionary of Terrorism Scarecrow Press p 474 ISBN 978 0 8108 6311 8 The Front de Liberation Nationale is an Algerian nationalist party that engaged in guerrilla warfare and terrorist attacks on the French colonial government to obtain independence for Algerian Arabs Goldsmith Melissa Ursula Dawn Fonseca Anthony J 2018 12 01 Hip Hop around the World An Encyclopedia Bloomsbury Publishing USA pp xvii ISBN 979 8 216 09618 4 The war broke out because of conflict between the Islamic Salvation Front FIS an Islamic fundamentalist party and the ruling National Liberation Front FLN an Algerian and Arab nationalist democratic socialist party Esposito John L 1998 08 01 Islam and Politics Fourth Edition Syracuse University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 8156 2774 6 During the late 1950s and early 1960s radical Arab regimes had come to power in Syria Iraq and Algeria as well as in Egypt Western inspired liberal governments were indicted for the continuance of feudal societies in the Middle East The Failure of liberal nationalism and the influence of Western capitalism and imperialism were denounced by the new regimes with promises of a social revolution to redress the profound socioeconomic inequities of their societies Rejecting a feudal past and a Western capitalist present the Baath Party in Syria and Iraq the Front de Liberation Nationale FLN in Algeria and Nasser in Egypt advocated an Arab nationalist socialist future Arab socialism Guidere Mathieu 2017 09 20 Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism Rowman amp Littlefield p 336 ISBN 978 1 5381 0670 9 Ideologically the FLN sought Pan Arab nationalism throughout Algeria using Islam to attain national consciousness and solidarity The founding anti imperialist doctrines of the FLN continued to remain at the core even after Algeria s independence and have affected the country s foreign policies Guidere Mathieu 2017 09 20 Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism Rowman amp Littlefield p 336 ISBN 978 1 5381 0670 9 Ideologically the FLN sought Pan Arab nationalism throughout Algeria using Islam to attain national consciousness and solidarity The founding anti imperialist doctrines of the FLN continued to remain at the core even after Algeria s independence and have affected the country s foreign policies Badie Bertrand 2018 06 29 New Perspectives on the International Order No Longer Alone in This World Springer p 113 ISBN 978 3 319 94286 5 The FLN s motivational ideology nationalism tinged with Arab socialism was soon turned into ordinary bureaucratic and military authoritarianism undermining the government s legitimacy in the eyes of the people who soon turned toward other horizons Esposito John L 1998 08 01 Islam and Politics Fourth Edition Syracuse University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0 8156 2774 6 During the late 1950s and early 1960s radical Arab regimes had come to power in Syria Iraq and Algeria as well as in Egypt Western inspired liberal governments were indicted for the continuance of feudal societies in the Middle East The Failure of liberal nationalism and the influence of Western capitalism and imperialism were denounced by the new regimes with promises of a social revolution to redress the profound socioeconomic inequities of their societies Rejecting a feudal past and a Western capitalist present the Baath Party in Syria and Iraq the Front de Liberation Nationale FLN in Algeria and Nasser in Egypt advocated an Arab nationalist socialist future Arab socialism Shillington Kevin 2005 Encyclopedia of African History A G 1 Taylor amp Francis p 101 ISBN 978 1 57958 245 6 The Algerian War for Independence began on November 1 1954 when the FLN Front de Liberation Nationale or National Liberation Front a group advocating for social democracy within an Islamic framework called upon all Algerians to rise up against French authority and fight for total independence for Algeria Goldsmith Melissa Ursula Dawn Fonseca Anthony J 2018 12 01 Hip Hop around the World An Encyclopedia Bloomsbury Publishing USA pp xvii ISBN 979 8 216 09618 4 The war broke out because of conflict between the Islamic Salvation Front FIS an Islamic fundamentalist party and the ruling National Liberation Front FLN an Algerian and Arab nationalist democratic socialist party Nyrop Richard F Studies American University Washington D C Foreign Area 1972 Area Handbook for Algeria U S Government Printing Office p 233 From its birth as an independent state Algeria s foreign policies were based on a realistic recognition of the need for economic assistance as well as on the government s revolutionary socialist ideology which pervaded all levels of policy formulation a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Harmon Stephen A 2016 03 09 Terror and Insurgency in the Sahara Sahel Region Corruption Contraband Jihad and the Mali War of 2012 2013 Routledge p 46 ISBN 978 1 317 04606 6 While the FLN always had Islamic overtones it was from the start a secular nationalist liberation movement on the Nasser model Entelis John P 2016 01 08 Algeria The Revolution Institutionalized Routledge p 165 ISBN 978 1 317 36098 8 According to Part 2 of the National Charter the FLN is officially given a vanguard role in Algerian politics and society Organized along recognizably Leninist lines the FLN is in theory the supreme mobilizer of the masses guardian of ideological standards watchdog over bureaucratic excesses and deviations and arbiter of policy Ma oz Moshe 2020 09 10 Jews Muslims and Jerusalem Disputes and Dialogues Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 1 78284 701 4 After the 1967 War against Israel also called the Six Day War nearly all the synagogues in Algeria were confiscated and were transformed into mosques Of the 120 000 Jews in Algeria in the 1940s only 1000 remained in 1969 and about 50 in the 1990s The Algerian governments since then have taken an anti Israel and pro Palestinian stand for many years Bucaille Laetitia 2019 06 14 Making Peace with Your Enemy Algerian French and South African Ex Combatants University of Pennsylvania Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 8122 5110 4 Moreover Algerian leaders asserted the glorious character of the victory over colonialisms emphasizing the paucity of the FLN s resources and the power of the French state to underscore the remarkable determination courage and spirit of sacrifice of Algerian combatants Houari Boumediene kept this spirit of resistance alive by adopting an anti imperialist stance on the international scene Algeria remained mobilized against the neocolonial temptations of France and the arrogance of the great powers Guidere Mathieu 2017 09 20 Historical Dictionary of Islamic Fundamentalism Rowman amp Littlefield p 336 ISBN 978 1 5381 0670 9 Ideologically the FLN sought Pan Arab nationalism throughout Algeria using Islam to attain national consciousness and solidarity The founding anti imperialist doctrines of the FLN continued to remain at the core even after Algeria s independence and have affected the country s foreign policies National Liberation Front Party Observatorio Electoral Retrieved 2023 12 05 Serres Thomas 16 November 2016 Quick Thoughts Thomas Serres on the Algerian Succession Jadaliyya Interview Arab Studies Institute Retrieved 20 August 2020 Europa World Year Book 2014 p 565 Evans M 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed London Yale University Press p 49 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 50 Britannica The Editors of Encyclopaedia Ahmed Messali Hadj Encyclopaedia Britannica January 01 2019 Retrieved April 22 2019 Spencer William Freedom and Unity in Algeria World Affairs 121 no 2 1958 35 37 JSTOR 20669518 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 53 a b McDougall James A History of Algeria New York Cambridge University Press 2017 p 194 a b c d Frank Tachau 1994 Political parties of the Middle East and North Africa Greenwood Press p31 The Multi Party System in Algeria PDF Yale University Retrieved 7 May 2016 S N Millar Arab Victory Lessons from the Algerian War 1954 62 British Army Review No 145 Autumn 2008 p 49 This number is given in the French Wikipedia fr Guerre d Algerie 7 1 Bilan humain in a reference to Guy Perville La guerre d Algerie en face L Histoire no 331 May 2008 p 96 in French Sorties de guerre Returning from war Sous la direction de Jacques Fremeaux et Michele Battesti 2005 Ministere de la Defense Secretariat general pour l administration Cahiers du Centre d etudes d histoire de la defense Page 48 Retrieved 11 December 2016 a b Horne Alistair A Savage War of Peace Algeria 1954 1962 1977 Thomas Martin Moore Bob Butler Larry 23 April 2015 Crises of Empire Decolonization and Europe s Imperial States ISBN 9781472531216 Still Waiting for Real Democracy The Economist 12 May 2012 Retrieved 4 November 2016 The dead live longer The Economist 21 September 2013 Algeria president paving way for succession news yahoo com Retrieved 2020 09 05 a b The Jews of Algeria 23 Feb 1962 The Spectator Archive The Spectator Archive Retrieved 2018 04 15 FLN Appeal of the FLN to Our Israelite Compatriots by FLN Algeria 1956 www marxists org Retrieved 2018 04 15 Algerian Jews During the French Algerian War Dissertation Reviews dissertationreviews org 22 September 2015 Retrieved 2018 04 15 Algerian Nationality Code Law no 63 69 of Mar 27 1963 section 34 Ethan Katz 2015 The Burdens of Brotherhood Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France Harvard University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 674 08868 9 Egger Vernon O 2018 05 01 A History of the Muslim World since 1260 The Making of a Global Community Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 72474 6 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 27 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 33 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 41 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 43 a b c Political Dynamics of Algeria Welcome to the CIA Web Site Accessed April 22 2019 Foran John 2005 11 17 Taking Power On the Origins of Third World Revolutions Cambridge University Press p 98 ISBN 978 1 139 44518 4 Anderson John 2013 09 13 Religion Democracy and Democratization Routledge p 125 ISBN 978 1 317 99903 4 Berger Anne Emmanuelle 2002 Algeria in Others Languages Cornell University Press p 35 ISBN 978 0 8014 3919 3 Ahluwalia Pal 2010 04 05 Out of Africa Post Structuralism s Colonial Roots Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 16179 8 Studies American University Washington D C Foreign Area 1979 Algeria a Country Study Department of Defense Department of the Army p 347 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Crowley Patrick 2017 Algeria Nation Culture and Transnationalism 1988 2015 Oxford University Press p 246 ISBN 978 1 78694 021 6 Najadi Hussain 2012 11 26 The Sea and the Hills ISBN 978 1 4772 4239 1 a b Vatikiotis P J 2022 09 30 Nasser and His Generation Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 000 72639 8 Anas Abdullah Hussein Tam 2019 To the Mountains My Life in Jihad from Algeria to Afghanistan Oxford University Press p 13 ISBN 978 1 78738 011 0 Baldauf Richard B Kaplan Robert B 2007 01 01 Language Planning and Policy in Africa Multilingual Matters p 64 ISBN 978 1 84769 011 1 Platteau Jean Philippe 2017 06 06 Islam Instrumentalized Cambridge University Press p 224 ISBN 978 1 107 15544 2 Ranelletti Andrea 2018 09 28 Enhancing Regional Governance and Multilateral Cooperation in Maghreb Edizioni Nuova Cultura p 120 ISBN 978 88 3365 076 0 Salih M 2009 09 28 Interpreting Islamic Political Parties Springer ISBN 978 0 230 10077 0 Ennaji Moha 2014 04 16 Multiculturalism and Democracy in North Africa Aftermath of the Arab Spring Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 81362 0 Reich Bernard 1990 Political Leaders of the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 26213 5 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 34 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 75 Byrne Jeffrey James Our Own Special Brand of Socialism Algeria and the Contest of Modernities in the 1960s Diplomatic History 33 no 3 June 2009 428 32 Isiksal Huseyin The Paradox of Economic Liberalisation and Democratisation Measures in Algeria Alternatives Turkish Journal Of International Relations January 7 2005 p 207 Byrne Jeffrey James Our Own Special Brand of Socialism Algeria and the Contest of Modernities in the 1960s Diplomatic History 33 no 3 June 2009 433 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 71 Byrne Jeffrey James Our Own Special Brand of Socialism Algeria and the Contest of Modernities in the 1960s Diplomatic History 33 no 3 June 2009 435 Evans 2007 Algeria Anger of the Dispossessed p 91 Decisions of the Council Socialist International Archived 2013 12 16 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading editAussaresses General Paul The Battle of the Casbah Terrorism and Counter Terrorism in Algeria 1955 1957 New York Enigma Books 2010 ISBN 978 1 929631 30 8 Derradji Abder Rahmane The Algerian Guerrilla Campaign Strategy amp Tactics Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 1997 Derradji Abder Rahmane Concise History of Political Violence in Algeria in Arms Brothers in Faith Enemies in Arms Vol 1 Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press September 2002 Derradji Abder Rahmane Concise History of Political Violence in Algeria in Arms Brothers in Faith Enemies in Arms Vol 2 Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press November 2002 Horne Alistair 1977 A Savage War of Peace Algeria 1954 1962 Viking Press McDougall James 2017 A History of Algeria Cambridge University Press McDougall James 2006 History and the culture of nationalism in Algeria Cambridge University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Liberation Front Algeria Official website in Arabic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Liberation Front Algeria amp oldid 1204204379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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