Algiers (AFP) - An Algerian court sentenced two former prime ministers to long jail terms Tuesday in the first of a string of high-profile corruption trials launched after longtime president Abdelaziz Bouteflika resigned in the face of mass protests in April.
Ahmed
Ouyahia was sentenced to 15 years and Abdelmalek Sellal to 12, the state-run
APS news agency reported.
It was the
first time since Algeria's independence from France in 1962 that former prime
ministers had been put on trial.
The state
prosecutor had sought 20-year prison sentences for the two ex-premiers.
In all, 19
defendants were tried on charges ranging from money laundering to abuse of
office and granting undue privileges in the vehicle assembly industry.
The nascent
Algerian automotive sector got its start in 2014, via partnerships between
foreign groups and large Algerian corporations, often owned by businessmen
linked to Bouteflika's entourage.
One former industry
minister, Abdeslam Bouchouareb, who is on the run abroad, was sentenced in
absentia to 20 years.
Two other
former industry ministers, Mahdjoub Bedda and Youcef Yousfi, were handed
10-year terms.
Businessman
Ali Haddad, founder and CEO of private construction firm ETRHB and former head
of Algeria's main employers' organisation, was sentenced to seven years.
Three
businessmen who own vehicle assembly plants -- Ahmed Mazouz, Hassen Arbaoui and
Mohamed Bairi -- were sentenced to seven years, six years and three years
respectively.
The
verdicts come just two days before Algeria is due to elect a president to replace
Bouteflika in a vote bitterly opposed by the country's nine-month-old protest
movement, which sees it as a regime ploy to cling to power.
While no
opinion polls have been published, observers expect high levels of abstention,
in keeping with previous elections in a political system seen by voters as
rigid and unaccountable.

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