Algeria’s ailing President Abdelaziz Bouteflika will resign before his mandate expires on April 28, his office said, after a succession of loyalists deserted him in the face of massive protests.
The 82-year-old, who has rarely been seen in public since a 2013 stroke, has been clinging to power as pressure mounted for weeks over attempts to prolong his 20-year rule.
Bouteflika will resign “before April 28, 2019”, after “important decisions” are taken, the presidency said in a statement on Monday, without elaborating.
He would take “steps to ensure state institutions continue to function during the transition period”, the statement carried by the official APS news agency said.
Algeria has been rocked by huge protests since the veteran president announced in February that he was seeking a fifth term in office.
Bouteflika said last month he would pull out of the race and postponed April elections, in moves that angered demonstrators, who saw it as a ploy to extend his two decades in power.
As the ire failed to subside, a number of high-profile loyalists have deserted the president.
On Tuesday, armed forces chief of staff General Ahmed Gaid Salah, who was appointed by Bouteflika in 2004, said the president should either resign or be declared medically unfit to govern by parliament using its constitutional powers.
And on Wednesday key coalition ally the National Rally for Democracy, (RND) headed by recently sacked prime minister Ahmed Ouyahia, called for Bouteflika’s resignation “with the aim of smoothing the period of transition.”
Under the constitution, once his resignation is tendered, the speaker of Algeria’s upper house of parliament, Abdelkader Bensalah, would act as interim leader for up to 90 days during which a presidential election must be organised.
The announcement on Monday was greeted by the beeping of some car horns in Algiers, but there was little sign of euphoria as people insisted the whole ruling system must change.
“Bouteflika quits and then what happens?” asked Sofiane, a 25-year-old doctor.
The Movement for the Society of Peace, a moderate Islamist party, said “the president’s resignation… without reforms could end up conspiring against the popular movement.”
“The move is just a way of keeping the political system with all the wrong turns that have led us to the current situation,” it said.
Graft probes
As rumors swirl of frantic behind-the-scenes maneuvering, prosecutors said they had banned corruption suspects from leaving Algeria after launching graft probes against unnamed individuals.
The authorities did not say who was being targeted by the new investigations into corruption and illegal money transfers abroad, but they followed the arrest of the president’s key backer, businessman Ali Haddad.
Haddad, who Forbes magazine describes as one of Algeria’s wealthiest entrepreneurs, was detained overnight Saturday to Sunday at a border post with neighboring Tunisia, a security source said, without giving reasons for the arrest.
On Sunday, the Algerian authorities also banned all private aircraft from taking off and landing until the end of the month.
The statement on Bouteflika’s impending resignation came after he named a new government made up mainly of technocrats under recently appointed premier Noureddine Bedoui.
The administration unveiled Sunday — which was supposed to steward the country towards a transition — included Gaid Salah remaining in his position as deputy defence minister.
The appointments failed to curb calls for Bouteflika to leave, as hundreds of people in Algiers demonstrated overnight against the announcement.
Algerian media outlets were awash with speculation that the announcement of the new government would pave the way for Bouteflika’s resignation.
The news website TSA described the administration as a “result of compromise between the army command and the presidency.”
The El Moudjahid daily, traditionally viewed as close to power, ran a headline reading “The Beginning of the End?” and said the army’s proposal for Bouteflika to go “is the only one that offers a clear and convincing way out.”
The idea of Bouteflika’s inner circle retaining their grip on power through a substitute leader has drawn short shrift from protesters dealing with high unemployment and economic hardships.
Young people have made up a key part of the demonstrations in a country where half the population is under 30.