Algeria court acquits key protest figure and regime opponent

Algeria court acquits  key protest  figure  and regime opponent
An Algerian protests at a rally in Algiers. (AFP)
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Updated 02 March 2020
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Algeria court acquits key protest figure and regime opponent

Algeria court acquits  key protest  figure  and regime opponent
  • The ailing Bouteflika duly stepped down in early April, due to pressure from the enormous protests

ALGIERS: An Algerian court on Sunday acquitted Fodil Boumala, a key figure in a protest movement that has rocked the country for over a year, his lawyer told AFP.
“He has been acquitted. He will go home today,” said Zoubida Assoul, a lawyer for the accused.
The prosecution had sought a year in prison for the regime opponent and former state TV journalist.
Held in detention since his arrest in mid-September, Boumala was accused of “undermining (national) territorial integrity,” which is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
He was also accused of distributing “publications that could undermine the national interest,” punishable by a year in prison.

HIGHLIGHT

The prosecution had sought a year in prison for the regime opponent and former state TV journalist.

Boumala was highly active in the “Hirak” protest movement, an unprecedented popular initiative which emerged in February last year to demand then President Abdelaziz Bouteflika abandon a bid for a fifth term in office.
The ailing Bouteflika duly stepped down in early April, due to pressure from the enormous protests.
Another key protest figure, Karim Tabbou, faces his own verdict on March 4, according to Noureddine Benissad, a member of his defense team.
He is likewise charged with “undermining (national) territorial integrity,” but is also accused of “violent actions” that sought to “impede the movement of military equipment,” said Benissad.