By Ebi Kesiena
Former Algerian President, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who fought for independence from France in the 1950s and 1960s has died at age 84.
Reports from the office of current President Abdelmadjid Tebboune, did not provide the cause of death or information about funeral arrangements.
Bouteflika had suffered a stroke in 2013 that badly weakened him. Concerns about his state of health, kept secret from the Algerian public, helped feed public frustration with his rule that erupted in mass public protests in 2019 that led to his departure.
Earlier in his life, Bouteflika fought for independence from colonial ruler France, successfully negotiated with the terrorist known as Carlos the Jackal to free oil Ministers taken hostage in a 1975 attack on OPEC headquarters, and helped reconcile Algerian citizens with each other after a decade of civil war between radical Muslim militants and Algeria’s security forces.
Bouteflika had been known as a wily survivor ever since he fought for independence from France.
He became Foreign Minister as just age 25, and stood up to the likes of Henry Kissinger in the height of the Cold War. At the time Algeria was a model of doctrinaire socialism tethered to the former Soviet Union and the capital, Algiers, was nicknamed “Moscow on the Med.”
In 20 years as President, however, his firebrand past dissolved as age and illness took its toll on the once-charismatic figure. Corruption scandals over infrastructure and hydrocarbon projects also dogged him for years and tarnished many of his closest associates. Many are now in prison.
Born on March 2, 1937 in the town of Oujda near the Morocco border, Bouteflika was among Algeria’s most enduring politicians. In Algeria’s bloody independence war, he commanded the southern Mali front and slipped into France clandestinely in 1961 to contact jailed liberation leaders.
He later embodied the Third World revolutionary who defied the West, acting as a prominent voice for the developing nations movement. He was active in the United Nations, and presided over the UN General Assembly in 1974.
Bouteflika stood firmly with the United States in the fight against terrorism after the September 11, 2001 attacks, particularly on intelligence-sharing and military cooperation.
As President starting in 1999, Bouteflika managed to bring stability to a country nearly brought to its knees in the 1990s as an Islamic insurgency left an estimated 200,000 people dead. He unveiled a bold program in 2005 to reconcile a nation fractured by a civil war by persuading Muslim radicals to lay down their arms.
Bouteflika and the country’s armed forces neutralized Algeria’s Islamic insurgency, but then watched it metastasize into a Saharan-wide movement linked to smuggling and kidnapping and to al-Qaida.
After years in office, Bouteflika’s powerful political machine had the constitution changed to cancel the Presidency’s two-term limit. He was then re-elected in 2009 and 2013, amid charges of fraud and a lack of powerful challengers.