As reported by Reuters:
* Protester wrestled to ground before he could ignite fuel
* Incident was at small protest over unemployment
* Algeria wary unrest could spread from Egypt, Tunisia
By Christian Lowe
ALGIERS, Feb 6 (Reuters) - An Algerian man doused himself with fuel and tried to set himself on fire on Sunday during a small protest outside a government ministry in the capital to demand more jobs.
Algerian opposition groups, inspired by uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia, say they will force the government to quit, but analysts say a revolt is unlikely because officials can use revenue from energy exports to soothe most grievances.
During the protest outside the employment ministry building involving about 30 people, a man arrived, poured fuel over himself from a jerry can and then tried to ignite it with a cigarette lighter.
A journalist standing nearby wrestled the man to the floor before he could set fire to himself, said a Reuters cameraman who was at the protest. The man was later escorted inside the ministry building by police.
A wave of protests in neighbouring Tunisia which forced out President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali last month was started by a young unemployed man setting himself on fire in an act of protest at his treatment by the authorities.
Since then, there has been a series of self-immolations around the Arab world, including several in Algeria.
JOBLESS RATE
According to official figures, Algeria's unemployment rate is around 10 percent, while joblessness among the young is more than twice that figure.
"What are those people at the top doing? They do not have the right to be there," said Abdu Bendjoudi, one of the organisers of Sunday's protest.
"If the government does not make an effort in this sense (to reduce unemployment), catastrophe approaches. What happened in Egypt and Tunisia risks coming here today."
Energy exporter Algeria has about $150 billion in foreign currency reserves, almost no external debt, and forecasts economic growth of 4 percent in 2011. But the economy, dominated by the oil and gas sector, produces too few jobs.
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, seeking to prevent opposition calls for protests from building momentum, promised last week more democratic freedoms and ordered the government to adopt new job-creation measures.
A coalition of civil society groups, some trade unionists and small political parties said they did not trust Bouteflika's promises, and would be going ahead with a planned protest rally in the capital on Feb. 12.
(Additional reporting by Abdelaziz Boumzar; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by David Stamp)
MAC.TV is an independent network television broadcasting company that owns and operates the largest African broadcast television station group in the U.S. MAC.TV and Ethiopian Radio and Television Agency (ERTA) currently broadcasts to over 6 global satellites worldwide reach major cities in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. VISIT US ON THE WEB AT HTTP://WWW.MYAFRICACHANNEL.TV
Pages
Popular Posts
-
CLICK TO VIEW SLIDE SHOW
-
The U.S. Department of State has warned U.S. citizens of the risks of travel to Niger, and urges extreme caution due to increased kidnap...
-
Senior Administration Officials to Hold Conference Call to Preview the First Lady’s Trip to South Africa and Botswana CLICK THE LINK FOR FU...
-
Uganda’s President opposes UN on Ouattara Jan 25, 2011 Williams Ekanem with agency reports....
-
By Williams Ekanem for MACTV NEWS The Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, in an analysis this month, estimated that the Libyan...
-
As reported by Reuters: * Libyans bury their dead * Bahrain police abandon main square to protesters *...
-
January 27, 2011 9:40:48 PM GABON-PROTEST/ (UPDATE 1) Download: Plain Text XML * Security forces use tear gas, dozens...
-
By Williams Ekanem President Barack Obama has written to the United Congress seeking support for the country’s involvement in the collatio...
-
January 21, 2011 10:13:42 PM * Odinga says "window closing fast" * AU unity at stake before end-of-month summit * State oil firm c...
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Man tries to set himself on fire at Algeria protest, Posted by Meosha Eaton
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment