

The military court in
Blida, south of Algiers, issued 15-year terms for “conspiring against the army”
and against “the authority of the state” to Mohamed Mediene, Bachir Tartag,
Bouteflika and Louisa Hanoune, giving them 10 days to appeal.
It was the first judgement
handed down to senior figures held during the mass protests which erupted in
February after veteran former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, the older brother
of Said Bouteflika, said he would seek a fifth term in office.
They have included two
former prime ministers, 11 ex-ministers and several prominent businessmen close
to Bouteflika, many of them on corruption charges.
The arrests were intended
to appease the hundreds of thousands of people who poured onto Algerian streets
this spring to demand change after decades of unrepresentative rule and growing
corruption.
But they also left the army
as the main player in Algerian politics, and its chief of staff Lieutenant
General Ahmed Gaed Salah has been pushing to end the protests and hold a new
presidential election on December 12.
However, tens of thousands
of protesters are still marching each week, rejecting the coming election and
demanding the army step back from politics. They say any vote that takes place
while other senior figures of the old guard remain in power could not be fair
or free.
Wednesday’s verdict is the
most significant judicial move in Algeria’s history, given the standing and
once-pervasive influence of those on trial.
Mediene was reputed for two
decades to be the ultimate authority behind the cloak of Algeria’s government,
a man whose image was never seen, but who held the fate of presidents,
ministers and political opponents in his hand.
Said Bouteflika
unofficially ran government from 2013, when his brother suffered a stroke,
until April when he was forced to step down. Tartag replaced Mediene as spy
chief in 2015. Hanoune was head of a pro-government political party.
The court also handed
20-year jail sentences in absentia to Khaled Nazzar, a former defense minister,
and his son Lotfi, both believed to be in Spain and subject to an international
arrest warrant, it said in a statement.
“The military court
observed all the rights required by a fair trial,” the statement said.
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