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Algeria prosecution seeks 10 years jail for writer Sansal on appeal

Algeria prosecution seeks 10 years jail for writer Sansal on appeal
A banner in support of detained Franco-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal, is displayed on a bridge in Beziers, southern France in this picture taken on March 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 June 2025

Algeria prosecution seeks 10 years jail for writer Sansal on appeal

Algeria prosecution seeks 10 years jail for writer Sansal on appeal
  • The dual Algerian French writer, whose case has been at the heart of a diplomatic row between Paris and Algiers, was sentenced to five years imprisonment on March 27
  • Sansal, 80, was arrested in November at the Algiers airport and has been detained since for undermining Algeria’s territorial integrity

ALGIERS: Algeria’s prosecutor general sought at an appeal hearing on Tuesday 10 years in prison for novelist Boualem Sansal, doubling his current sentence, an AFP journalist in the courtroom reported.

The dual Algerian French writer, whose case has been at the heart of a diplomatic row between Paris and Algiers, was sentenced to five years imprisonment on March 27.

A verdict is expected on July 1.

Sansal, 80, was arrested in November at the Algiers airport and has been detained since for undermining Algeria’s territorial integrity.

This came after he said in an interview with a far-right French media outlet that France unfairly ceded Moroccan territory to Algeria during the 1830-1962 colonial era.

The statement was viewed by Algeria as an affront to its national sovereignty and echoed a long-standing Moroccan claim.

On Tuesday, Sansal appeared before the judge without legal representation after authorities said he wished to defend himself.

“The Algerian Constitution guarantees freedom of expression and conscience,” he told the court during the roughly 20-minute hearing, seemingly in good health. “This makes no sense.”

Defending the remarks he made to French far-right media on Algeria’s borders, he said: “Fortunately, after independence in 1962, the African Union declared that inherited colonial borders are inviolable.”

Also questioned on some of his books, Sansal answered: “We are holding a trial over literature? Where are we headed?“

According to his relatives, Sansal has been undergoing treatment for prostate cancer, and many feared his health would deteriorate in prison.

French President Emmanuel Macron has urged his Algerian counterpart Abdelmadjid Tebboune to show “mercy and humanity” toward Sansal.

But Algiers has insisted that the writer has been afforded due process.

His conviction and sentence further frayed ties between Paris and Algiers, already strained by migration issues and Macron’s recognition last year of Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed territory of Western Sahara, which is claimed by the Algeria-backed pro-independence Polisario Front.

Charges against the writer include “undermining national unity,” “insulting state institutions,” “harming the national economy,” and “possessing media and publications threatening the country’s security and stability.”


Palestinian militants hand over body of another Gaza hostage

Palestinian militants hand over body of another Gaza hostage
Updated 5 sec ago

Palestinian militants hand over body of another Gaza hostage

Palestinian militants hand over body of another Gaza hostage
  • If the remains in the latest handover over are confirmed to be those of an additional hostage that would leave five others still in Gaza
  • As part of the ceasefire, Israel has released the bodies of 285 Palestinians

JERUSALEM: Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad handed over the body of a deceased hostage on Friday as part of the Gaza ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

The Israeli military said in a statement on Saturday it had confirmed the body was that of Lior Rudaeff following an identification process.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said that a coffin carrying the remains of a hostage has been handed over to Israeli security forces in Gaza via the Red Cross.

Islamic Jihad is an armed group that is allied with Hamas and which also took hostages during the October 7, 2023 attack that precipitated the Gaza war. It said the hostage’s body was located in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis.

Under the October ceasefire deal Hamas turned over all 20 living hostages still held in Gaza since the group’s 2023 attack on Israel, in return for nearly 2,000 Palestinian convicts and wartime detainees held in Israel.

The ceasefire agreement also included the return of remains of 28 deceased hostages in exchange for remains of 360 militants.

Including Rudaeff, taken from the Kibbutz Nir Yitzchak, 23 hostage bodies have been returned in exchange for 285 bodies of Palestinians, though not all have been identified, according to Gaza’s health authorities.

Hamas-led militants seized 251 hostages in the 2023 attack and killed another 1,200 people, most of them civilians, according to Israeli tallies. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed nearly 69,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, health officials in Gaza say.

The tenuous ceasefire has calmed most but not all fighting, allowing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to return to the ruins of their homes in Gaza. Israel has withdrawn troops from positions in cities and more aid has been allowed in.