Army chief says ‘time running out’ to resolve Algeria crisis

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Ahmed Gaid Salah says solution must be found ‘as soon as possible’, as protesters demand departure of rulers.

 

Algeria’s army chief has said the military is considering all options to resolve the country’s political crisis, as thousands of protesters marched through the capital calling for the country’s interim leaders to resign.

 

In a speech broadcast on state media on Tuesday, General Ahmed Gaid Salah warned that “time is running out” to find a solution to the ongoing upheaval ahead of elections scheduled for July 4.

 

“All options are open in the pursuit of overcoming the different difficulties and finding a solution to the crisis as soon as possible, in a way that serves our nation’s interests without regard to individual interest,” he said.

 

His comments came after state media reported that the head of the Algerian Constitutional Council had stepped down.

 

Tayeb Belaiz on Tuesday informed the council, which will play a key role in upcoming presidential elections, that “he presented his resignation … to the head of state”.

 

 

Algerians have called for Belaiz and other top figures to quit in mass rallies which prompted the departure of veteran President Abdelaziz Bouteflika earlier this month.

 

Despite the president’s resignation, the demonstrations have continued, with protesters calling for a broad overhaul of the political system.

 

In Algiers on Tuesday, marchers demanded that Bouteflika’s allies withdraw from any political transition.

 

“We will continue to march until a transitional (authority) led by clean politicians is set up,” medical student Mira Laifa told AFP news agency.

 

Samia Baloun, 25, told DPA news agency that the departure of Belaiz “opens the way for the resignation of other members of the regime, who are hated by the streets”.