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Algeria ruling party snubs Arab Spring to win election

Algeria's National Liberation Front (FLN) leader Abdelaziz Belkhadem casts his ballot during parliamentary elections at a polling station in Algiers May 10, 2012. REUTERS/Louafi Larbi

By Christian Lowe and Lamine Chikhi

ALGIERS

(Reuters) – Algeria on Friday declared its ruling party for the past 50 years the victor in a

parliamentary election, going against the tide of the “Arab Spring” which has transformed its

neighbours.

Algeria's

National Liberation Front (FLN) leader Abdelaziz Belkhadem casts his ballot during parliamentary

elections at a polling station in Algiers May 10, 2012. REUTERS/Louafi Larbi

The governing elite in Algeria, which supplies about a fifth of Europe’s

imported natural gas, had promised reform and a new generation of leaders in response to last year’s

upheavals in the region, but the election preserved the status quo.

Interior Minister Daho Ould

Kablia, who oversaw Thursday’s election, said the National Liberation Front (FLN) would be the biggest

party in the new parliament, with 220 of the 462 seats.

The FLN was the movement which fought

for independence from French colonial rule and has been at the heart of power in Algeria ever

since.

“There is no change,” political analyst and writer Abed Charef told Reuters. “Algeria has

invented the force of inertia.”

The official results showed that the FLN, whose honorary head is

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, had increased its share of seats to 47 percent from 34

percent.

Second place went to the National Democratic Rally (RND), with 68 seats. The RND is led

by Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia and was in second place to the FLN in the outgoing

parliament.

The Green Algeria alliance, a grouping of moderate Islamist parties with links to

the ruling establishment, was in third place with 48 seats.

In fourth was the secularist Front

of Socialist Forces, Algeria’s oldest opposition group, which ended over a decade of boycotts to run

in the election.

The Interior Minister said people had chosen to back the FLN because it was a

party they knew, and which offered a safe “refuge” from the turmoil in the region.

“The election

has reinforced the Algerian people’s attachment to the values of peace and stability,” Interior

Minister Ould Kablia told a news conference. “If the people have chosen the same parties who were in

the previous parliament, it is their right to choose.”

ISOLATED

The result leaves Algeria

the odd man out in North Africa. Egypt, Libya and Tunisia all have had revolutions that ousted

autocratic leaders, while Morocco, Algeria’s neighbour to the west, now has an Islamist former

opposition leader as its prime minister.

The insurrections in the region last year prompted

calls for Algeria to embrace democracy more completely and to renew an establishment that has run the

country without interruption since independence from France in 1962.

Yet it was clear the

election was not a clean break from the past. More than half of eligible voters abstained, with many

saying they had no faith there would be real change. Seventeen percent of ballots were spoiled or

invalid.

Many believe real power lies with an informal network commonly known by the French term

“le pouvoir”, or “the power”, which is unelected, has been around for years and has its roots in the

security forces. Officials deny such a network exists.

Despite the apathy, there is little

appetite for a revolt.

The country is still emerging from a conflict in the 1990s between

security forces and Islamist insurgents, which killed an estimated 200,000 people. Few people want any

radical change that could tip Algeria back into violence.

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 75, is

likely to exercise his prerogative to appoint a new prime minister after the election. The victory

makes FLN leader Abdelaziz Belkhadem, who has already served once as prime minister, a leading

candidate for the job.

“The next prime minister should be Abdelaziz Belkhadem, the big winner of

the legislative elections, but little if no change at all is expected in Algeria’s political scene,”

said Farid Alilat, a political analyst and editor of online news portal DNA.

Algerians who had

hoped the “Arab Spring” would lead to reform in their country were scornful of the

election.

Yacine Zaid, a human rights activist and critic of the ruling elite, called the

election “a masquerade, a circus … The authorities have always dared to do what they want, to give

whatever figures are in their head.”

However, European Union vote monitors said the organisation

of the vote was satisfactory. “Citizens were, in general, able to truly exercise their right to vote,”

said Jose Ignacio Salafranca, head of the EU observer mission.

Attention is likely to turn now

to the race to succeed Bouteflika, who is frail and is not expected to run again when his term ends in

2014. Under Algeria’s constitution, the president has much more power than parliament.

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