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- <text id=94TT0152>
- <title>
- Feb. 07, 1994: Faith's Fearsome Sword
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 07, 1994 Lock 'Em Up And Throw Away The Key
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ALGERIA, Page 48
- Faith's Fearsome Sword
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>No one is safe as a populist Islamic movement challenges the
- army-backed state
- </p>
- <p>By Lara Marlowe/Algiers--With reporting by Thomas Sancton/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Everyone liked Raymond Louzoum. Children would stop to stare
- at the marionettes in the window of his optical shop in downtown
- Algiers. With his fair hair and blue eyes, the tall, garrulous
- Tunisian Jew was often mistaken for a Frenchman. During 30 years
- in the city, Louzoum even played the role of a French colonel
- in an Algerian film on the war of independence. But in a city
- where foreigners are now targeted for death by Islamic militants,
- few people were surprised when a young man walked into Louzoum's
- shop in broad daylight last week and shot him dead, just a few
- hundred yards from a police checkpoint. His murder mocked government
- claims that "security and order are being restored."
- </p>
- <p> Louzoum's assassination was a reminder that no one is safe in
- Algeria as a populist Islamic fundamentalist movement struggles
- to take power from the army-backed state. Despite an official
- state of emergency under strict military enforcement, more than
- 3,500 Algerians have been killed in the past two years, the
- head of state was assassinated 18 months ago, and two former
- Prime Ministers have packed their bags and moved to Paris.
- </p>
- <p> In the two years since the powerful military canceled the first
- free parliamentary elections to forestall a Muslim fundamentalist
- victory, Algeria has plunged into its bloodiest crisis since
- the 1954-62 war of independence from France. The Islamic Salvation
- Front, seeking to turn the country into a religious state, has
- attracted the allegiance of millions in a population ripe with
- discontent after 30 years of misrule by the one-party socialist
- government. Declining oil revenues, crushing unemployment, rampant
- inflation and widespread government corruption have fueled a
- revolt against the old leadership and a crisis in national identity.
- </p>
- <p> Under a harsh military crackdown on the Islamic Front, outlawed
- in 1992, the battle for Algeria has only worsened. Armed militants
- ambush police, assassinate officials and murder intellectuals
- and others opposed to the fundamentalist movement. Security
- forces arrest suspects at will, torture prisoners and sentence
- alleged rebels to death in extraconstitutional courts. The government
- attributes the daily civilian slayings to the Islamists. But
- Algerian and Western sources say antifundamentalist death squads,
- suspected of links to the security services, also operate during
- the nightly curfews, kidnapping Islamists or their relatives
- from home and dumping their bodies nearby.
- </p>
- <p> The dangers are especially frightening for thousands of alien
- residents. Last autumn, militant Islamists threatened death
- to all foreigners who did not quit the country. "The terrorists
- play on people's nerves until they crack up and leave," says
- a member of the dwindling French community. Raymond Louzoum,
- who was married to a Muslim and had applied for Algerian nationality,
- did not want to go and so became the 27th victim. "He fitted
- my first pair of glasses when I was four years old," said a
- young woman who works in an office opposite the optician's shop,
- choking back tears. "If they had let the Islamists come to power,
- none of this would have happened."
- </p>
- <p> Ordinary citizens have lost their bearings. In an attempt to
- turn Algerians against the Islamists, state television has been
- broadcasting a Swiss documentary on the murderous feuding among
- the mujahedin vying for power in Afghanistan. "I couldn't sleep
- after I saw it," says an Algiers housewife. "All those destroyed
- buildings and destroyed people. Is Kabul going to be our future?"
- But like many of her friends, this middle-class woman started
- wearing an Islamic head scarf after a female French diplomat
- was slain in an Algiers parking lot. "When I went shopping without
- a scarf, the vendors spoke to me in French and called me madame,"
- she explains. "When I wear the scarf, they call me sister in
- Arabic."
- </p>
- <p> For those who cannot obtain visas and the foreign currency to
- flee, life grows ever more difficult. Breadlines form outside
- bakeries at 6 a.m. Cooking oil, meat and basic medicines are
- virtually unobtainable for the poor. Garbage is no longer collected
- regularly, and refuse piles up in the streets.
- </p>
- <p> For security forces, fundamentalist supporters and civilians
- alike, the threat of violence is everywhere at all times. In
- much of the countryside and in the poor slums of the capital,
- Algerians refer to security forces as the "government of the
- day" and the Islamic guerrillas as the "government of the night."
- Even in heavily policed areas of Algiers, the fundamentalists
- impose their rule by threats: residents are ordered to disconnect
- the "diabolic" satellite TV dishes that broadcast Western programs.
- Some shops selling alcohol, pop music and videocassettes have
- been forced to change merchandise or close. A police officer
- had his throat slashed in front of his wife and children last
- month when he was caught at a checkpoint set up by fundamentalist
- guerrillas wearing stolen police uniforms. These fake roadblocks,
- set up steadily closer to the capital, deter residents from
- venturing out after dark.
- </p>
- <p> When the state of emergency was proclaimed two years ago, the
- government promised a conference of national dialogue to choose
- a new President and map out a transition back to stability and
- democratic elections. Algerians saw the plan as a last-ditch
- effort by the country's political class to cling to power, but
- it at least offered some hope of salvaging the nation's institutions.
- Last week all the main political parties, including the banned
- Islamic Front, boycotted the meeting, and the few that did attend
- walked out. "They keep bringing out the same old leaders. We
- don't want them anymore," said an Algerian journalist.
- </p>
- <p> The military-dominated High Security Council is expected to
- name an army officer as President this week. Algerians are divided
- at the prospect. Those who regard themselves as democrats are
- clamoring for military rule as the best hope of avoiding a fundamentalist
- takeover. But on the streets of Algiers, support for the Islamic
- Front still runs high. "The authorities say they want a modern,
- democratic republic," says one supporter. "Instead they have
- given us corruption, poverty and a total absence of democracy."
- </p>
- <p> Algerians have so far ignored Islamist appeals to rise up en
- masse. But as the economy continues to sink and violence spins
- toward anarchy, there are no signs of a real compromise between
- the military and the fundamentalists. Islamic leaders are losing
- authority to new, more militant armed insurrectionists who would
- probably continue their attacks even if a settlement were achieved.
- The army itself could split: while top brass are vehemently
- antifundamentalist, some junior officers and conscripts are
- believed to lean toward the Islamists. "It would mean civil
- war with tanks and MiG-27s," says a military analyst in Algiers.
- </p>
- <p> "The victory of the fundamentalists is inevitable," says a French
- Defense Ministry official, who fears the Algerian government
- is too corrupt, inept and unpopular to last long. Paris is fearful,
- says another official, that a huge influx of refugees, up to
- 500,000, "would shake up the whole French political scene, giving
- strength to the far right and waking up a lot of evil genies."
- France and the U.S. both warn that if Algeria goes Islamic,
- a domino effect could ripple through North Africa, putting mounting
- pressure on nations like Tunisia and Morocco to negotiate better
- political deals with their own fundamentalist opposition. But
- the ultimate impact, say Washington analysts, would be on Egypt,
- already contending with a series of violent attacks by religious
- militants. For that reason, the U.S. has turned a blind eye
- to the draconian measures of the Algerian government to crush
- the Islamic threat by any means.
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the deepening crisis lies the conundrum of democracy.
- When a party calling for Islamic law stands to win a free election,
- should their wishes be respected if their use of democracy endangers
- the lives and freedom of opponents? It is an explosive question
- with powerful repercussions not only for Algeria but also for
- the rest of the Arab world.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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