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Algeria pardons writer Boualem Sansal

Update Algeria pardons writer Boualem Sansal
Algerian writer Boualem Sansal. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 sec ago

Algeria pardons writer Boualem Sansal

Algeria pardons writer Boualem Sansal
  • The statement said Germany would take charge of the transfer and treatment of Sansal, who has prostate cancer, according to his family
  • He was arrested in November 2014 at Algiers airport. Because he did not appeal March’s ruling, he was eligible for a presidential pardon

ALGIERS: Algeria has pardoned French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal after a request from Germany, to where he will be transferred for medical treatment after a year in detention, it was announced Wednesday.
After German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Monday urged Algeria to free the 81-year-old, “the president of the republic decided to respond positively,” the Algerian presidency said.
The statement said Germany would take charge of the transfer and treatment of Sansal, who has prostate cancer, according to his family.
Sansal was given a five-year jail term in March, accused of undermining Algeria’s territorial integrity after he told a far-right French outlet last year that France had unjustly transferred Moroccan territory to Algeria during the 1830 to 1962 colonial period.
Algeria views those ideas — which align with longstanding Moroccan territorial claims — as a challenge to its sovereignty.
He was arrested in November 2014 at Algiers airport. Because he did not appeal March’s ruling, he was eligible for a presidential pardon.
Steinmeier urged Algeria to make a humanitarian gesture “given Sansal’s advanced age and fragile health condition” and said Germany would take charge of his “relocation to Germany and subsequent medical care.”

- ‘Mercy and humanity’ -

French President Emmanuel Macron had also urged Tebboune to show “mercy and humanity” by releasing the author.
Sansal’s daughter Sabeha Sansal, 51, told AFP by telephone from her home in the Czech Republic of her relief.
“I was a little pessimistic because he is sick, he is old, and he could have died there,” she said. “I hope we will see each other soon.”
A prize-winning figure in North African modern francophone literature, Sansal is known for his criticism of Algerian authorities as well as of Islamists.
He acquired French nationality in 2024.
Appearing in court without legal counsel on June 24, Sansal had said the case against him “makes no sense” as “the Algerian constitution guarantees freedom of expression and conscience.”
When questioned about his writings, Sansal asked: “Are we holding a trial over literature? Where are we headed?“
His case has become a cause celebre in France, but his past support for Israel and his 2014 visit there have made him largely unpopular in Algeria.
The case has also become entangled in the diplomatic crisis between Paris and Algiers, which has led to the expulsion of officials on both sides, the recall of ambassadors and restrictions on holders of diplomatic visas.
Another point of contention was the sentencing to seven years in prison of French sportswriter Christophe Gleizes in Algiers on accusations of attempting to interview a member of the Movement for the Self-Determination of Kabylie (MAK), designated a terrorist organization by Algeria in 2021.
- Civil servant turned novelist -

An economist by training, Sansal worked as a senior civil servant in his native Algeria, with his first novel appearing in 1999.
“The Barbarians’ Oath” dealt with the rise of fundamentalist Islam in Algeria and was published in the midst of the country’s civil war which left some 200,000 people dead according to official figures.
He was fired from his post in the industry ministry in 2003 for his opposition to the government but continued publishing.
His 2008 work “The German Mujahid” was censored in Algeria for drawing parallels between Islamism and Nazism.
He has received several international prizes for his work, including in France and Germany.
In recent years Germany has offered refuge to several high-profile prisoners from other countries.
The late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was treated at Berlin’s Charite hospital after being poisoned in August 2020.
Last year Germany welcomed several other high-profile Russian dissidents as part of a historic prisoner swap with Moscow.


Israel announces demolitions of Palestinian homes to build incineration plant

Israel announces demolitions of Palestinian homes to build incineration plant
Updated 3 sec ago

Israel announces demolitions of Palestinian homes to build incineration plant

Israel announces demolitions of Palestinian homes to build incineration plant
  • Eden, a development company owned by the Jerusalem Municipality, was tasked in May to construct the waste facility at the Qalandiya site
  • ‘The government’s appetite for annexation and dispossession knows no bounds,’ the Peace Now group says

LONDON: An Israeli project to construct a waste incineration plant north of occupied East Jerusalem will result in the demolition of two apartment buildings that house dozens of Palestinian families, according to an advocacy group.

Residents of homes and agricultural lands in the village of Qalandiya have been notified by Israeli authorities about the upcoming demolition and eviction in late November to facilitate the construction of a waste treatment and energy recovery facility.

Authorities will confiscate approximately 32 acres of agricultural land to demolish part of the Separation Barrier and reroute it to accommodate the plant within Jerusalem’s municipal boundaries. The area contains at least seven residential buildings housing hundreds of residents, as reported by the Wafa news agency.

In April, the Israeli government reinstated two dormant confiscation orders from 1970 and 1982 to serve as a “legal basis” for newly issued eviction orders against Palestinian residents in the area, according to reports from Wafa and the advocacy group Peace Now.

Eden, a development company owned by the Jerusalem Municipality, was tasked in May to construct the waste facility at the Qalandiya site. The Israeli Ministry of Environmental Protection is allocating approximately $3 million to finance the relocation of a section of the Separation Barrier.

“The government’s appetite for annexation and dispossession knows no bounds. As if there were no other place in the Jerusalem area to build a waste facility besides the few remaining (acres) left to Qalandiya’s residents after decades of expropriations and fences,” Peace Now said.

“This would constitute a blatant violation of international law and basic moral principles to expel residents living under occupation for the sake of a plant serving the occupying power,” it added.

Palestinian residents are preparing to launch a legal challenge to prevent their removal after being given 20 days to evacuate in late October.