Algiers (AFP) - Algeria's army chief on Tuesday pledged to guarantee the country's security following mass demonstrations against ailing President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's bid for a fifth term in office.
General
Ahmed Gaid Salah also criticised those who he said want to return to the
"painful years" of the 1992-2002 civil war "during which the
Algerian people experienced all forms of suffering and paid a heavy
price."
The armed
forces chief of staff said in a speech at a military academy outside Algiers
that the country's success "in eradicating terrorism... has displeased
some parties who are upset to see Algeria stable and safe."
The people
will continue to enjoy "security and stability" of which the army
"will remain the guarantor", the general, who is close to Bouteflika
and considered one of Algeria's most powerful figures, said according to an
official transcript.
The army
chief, who is deputy defence minister, urged Algerians to be ready to
"erect a rampart against anything that could expose Algeria to
unpredictable threats".
Protests
have seen tens of thousands of people take to the streets of the North African
country since last month demanding the 82-year-old president resign.
Thousands
of students marched in the capital and other cities on Tuesday in the latest
display of public anger.
Bouteflika,
who suffered a stroke in 2013 and is rarely seen in public, promised on Sunday
that if he wins elections in April he will organise a "national
conference" to set a date for further polls which he would not contest.
His pledge,
made in a letter read out on state television, has been dismissed as an insult
by Algerians weary of his two-decade-old rule.
Bouteflika
has been in Switzerland since February 24 for what the presidency has described
as "routine medical tests".
VIDEO: Young Algerians react, as thousands of Algerian students marched in protest at ailing President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's determination to stand for re-election, brushing aside his pledge not to serve a full fifth term https://t.co/xmdVjkPYgx pic.twitter.com/bhBdHjF5U0— AFP news agency (@AFP) 5 maart 2019

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