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Title: Algeria, the other war
Author: Fadila
Language: en
Topics: anarcho-syndicalism, Africa, Algeria, anti-imperialism, anti-capitalism, anti-colonialism
Source: http://struggle.ws/africa/algeria/f_guerre_jun99.html
Notes: This is an article writen by algerian anarcho-syndicalists about the actual situation in Algeria. It is taken from Le Combat Syndicalist (Syndicalist struggle), paper of CNT AIT, french section of IWA (anarchosyndicalist international)

Fadila

Algeria, the other war

Algeria has been at war for seven years. State totalitarianism against

religious totalitarianism. The number of deaths given by official

undertakers is 500,000.

Seven years of power struggles between clans! 200 deaths a day, and that

will not stop until the appropriation of the goods, of all the goods, by

one clique or the other is realized. After that, the war may end, unless

a social upheaval takes place, so great is the dilapidation of the

living conditions of the people. Behind this war, which dresses in

democracy or Islamism, hides a cynical decoupage of Algeria. And that,

the media take care never to speak about it. So, back from Algiers and

some southern cities, I want to denounce the other side of this war,

that of money, profit, exploitation, looting.

Thanks to this war, the IMF (International Monetary Fund) is setting up

a restructuring plan completely unopposed, which consists in

liberalizing the market, privatizing companies, dismissing workers

(70,000 redundancies in four years). Under Boumediene et al, thanks to

the country's energy resources (gas, oil), the people, if they were not

entitled to the opulence of the clan in power, did not starve. The state

subsidized all imports of first necessity, the school was actually free,

as well as health. The caliph Boumediene and his cohort of soldiers

reigned as fathers and masters, without political instability, without

social upheavals. At the time of globalization, this power struggle was

certainly welcome. Nothing is as inhibiting as fear. "Terror makes

people dumb," many dictators will tell you. Thanks to this war, oil

concessions were sold to American, German, Canadian, French and Italian

capitalists. In these sites, there is not an attack, not a false dam,

not a butcher, not a carnage. Oil and gas flow freely. The surveillance

is infallible. The Americans brought their own watchdogs into their

luggage. No civilian can enter without a safe conduct. "A country in the

country." Gold deposits have been discovered in the central Sahara. An

operating company has already been set up in partnership with South

Africans. During the winter of 1998-99, a team of Americans, Canadians

and Australians was invited by the Algerian authorities to visit other

sites and to negotiate future concessions. It seems that they are more

greedy and do not want traditional 49% of the shares of the company, but

50%.

Thanks to this war, military and state officials have taken over all the

big markets (pharmaceuticals, real estate, coffee, sugar, bananas), and

the national drug production company (ENPHARM), after being run by this

clique, was put on the stock market in February 1999, the big

shareholders being always the same soldiers and politicards.

Thanks to this war, the multinationals, Coca-Cola, Daewoo, have finally

established themselves in Algeria.

Thanks to this war, and with the help of the IMF, inflation has reached

unbearable proportions for most people. And it's not over, it's just the

beginning. Misery has settled everywhere. There is no longer a middle

class. There are the rich, the very rich, there are the moderately poor

and there are the totally deprived. The pit between rich and poor is

growing at a dizzying pace.

Indeed how can we get by when the salary of a smicard is 5000 dinars,

that of an average cadre of 15,000 dinars, while the baguette costs 9

dinars, the liter of milk 22, the kilo of semolina 40, the kilo of rice

60, the pasta 70, the dried vegetables between 50 and 80, the kilo of

meat 500, the shrimps between 500 and 1000, the chicken 150, the sardine

(the fish poor in the 70-80) 70, and the egg 6 dinars? How can one be

treated when a banal medical prescription (care for an influenza or

angina) is at least 1,000 dinars and social security reimburses only 20

to 40%? A doctor friend told me that people were only buying the most

"necessary" drugs. For the rest, "take your trouble!" As the state

withdraws more and more from all public services (health, education,

housing, employment, etc.), there is also the dramatic problem of

housing which has only worsened since the war. With the privatization

and the liberalization of the market, the prices of rents have flown

away! For an F2 in the poor suburbs of Algiers, one pays between 8,000

and 13,000 dinars a month. Some agencies make one-year contracts

renewable and require the price of one year's rent in advance.

To escape, there is still the family network, when the children are old

enough to work, and if they manage to get a job. Otherwise there is the

D system. In all Algiers, there are young people selling retail

cigarettes because people can no longer afford to buy a whole package.

There is the sale on the go of anything and everything (of course import

items). There are these old women and little children who sell, around

the Closel and Messonier markets, bread, couscous, and odds and ends.

There is begging, which in four years has spread throughout Algiers.

Children between 8 and 12 years old, old women, old women who roam the

streets all day long, who go into the shops, restaurants, travel

agencies and to whom we do not yet have the courage to say to go begging

outside. There are also those who have been fired, the "crazy", more and

more numerous, who roam while talking while holding political speeches

that are not so incoherent as one might think.

And all this is only the beginning, the worst is not yet happening. He

is still in power to grab the land. Land privatization laws are

fictitious. But who will be the beneficiaries?

The fellahs, who worked these lands during the period of the agrarian

revolution with the slogan "the land is to the one who works it"? The

former owners of the pre-independence war (since at that time the social

system was "tribal" and communal lands belonged to the tribes)? Or the

big fortunes tied to power (military and other mafias)? It may be

necessary to emphasize here that the famous "triangle of death", as the

Western press calls it, is nothing other than the great plain of

Mitidja: the most fertile lands of Algeria. Is it a tactic of economic

warfare that consists of the terror and massacres of entire families to

empty these lands of its occupants to facilitate their appropriation by

those who are sharing the country?

What lies behind this war, as behind all the others, besides (the Gulf

War, Kosovo, Rwanda, occupied Palestine), are economic interests and

geostrategic issues. A new sharing of the world is being done, with a

fierce fight between Americans and Europeans. People can die, bombs,

saber blows or hunger (30 million people die each year of hunger This is

the largest of the genocides of our century, but it does not matter to

them.What interests them is to establish their new police and economic

order, with the complicity of the local rulers, be they Fachos,

integrists or totalitarians, and the active collaboration of the media,

who consciously keep quiet about it.

I would like to finish with a sentence that a friend from Algiers told

me. "More than anything, it is the social fabric, the solidarity, the

conviviality, the warmth, the sense of hospitality that we are

destroying." And when it's totally done, they'll be successful. Everyone

will think only of his skin to get out of the galley. We will become

individualists. And individualism is one of the fundamental bases of

capitalism.