From: RCYB Atlanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 16 Jan 2002 10:26:51 -0800 (PST)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Peoples War] Algeria: Uprising in Kabylia

Algeria: Uprising in Kabylia
Revolutionary Worker #1135, January 10, 2002, posted at rwor.org
Since April of last year, Algeria has been shaken by uprisings among the
Amazigh (Berber) people in the Kabylia region. This country in north Africa
has seen ferocious street battles against the government forces, especially
by poor youth, as well as huge protests of hundreds of thousands of people.

The immediate spark for the upsurge was the April 18 murder of a student by
the Algerian gendarmes (national paramilitary police). Eighteen-year-old
Massinissa Guermah was shot 27 times at the local gendarme post in Beni
Douala, near the regional capital, Tizi Ouzou. The police then fired at
youth protesting the killing. As outrage quickly spread, fighting broke out
in the towns and villages throughout Kabylia. During an intense period of
ten days, youth attacked government and police buildings with rocks, Molotov
cocktails, and iron bars. They demanded the withdrawal of gendarmes from
Kabylia and rights for the Amazigh people, including the recognition of
their language, Tamazight.

In a report on the Kabylia uprising, the latest issue of the revolutionary
internationalist journal A World to Win (2001/27) gives some background:
"The Amazigh are descendants of the occupants of North Africa before the
Arab/Islamic invasion. The population of Tunisia, Libya and Morocco as well
as Algiers are heavily marked by their non-Arab roots. Although a
thousand-year forced Arabisation and Islamisation has had a big impact, even
today 25 percent of Algerians are Tamazight speaking. In Morocco, the
percentage is even higher, perhaps half the population. Although Berber is
the more common name, it comes from the Latin word for barbarian and is
considered an insult. All these governments deny them the right to use their
language in public life, and their culture is suppressed. They are subject
to contempt and discrimination. The gendarmes in Kabylia ride roughshod over
the people, taking what they want from small shops, extorting businessmen
and especially harassing, beating and sometimes murdering the youth."

During the Algerian war of independence against France (1954-1962), Kabylia
was a major bastion of struggle. But the end of direct colonial rule did not
bring real liberation for the people of Algeria, who continue to be
oppressed by imperialist domination, bureaucrat capitalism (which is
dependent on imperialism), and semi-feudalism. The oppression of the Amazigh
people has been part of this overall continuation of the old social and
economic relationships under the rule of the post-independence governments.
While France remains the main imperialist power in Algeria, the U.S. is also
circling like a vulture, trying to snatch the country for its own oil and
strategic interests.

Since the ten days of rebellion in April, the youth and others have
continued their struggle against the Algerian regime. On May 21, more than
half a million people--city residents and people who came down from the
villages in the mountains--took part in an illegal demonstration in Tizi
Ouzou. Then on June 14, more than a million people marched through the
streets of Algiers, the country's capital. Many Amazigh people live in
Algiers, and large numbers of protesters from Kabylia poured into the city
as well. But the June 14 march also involved many non-Amazigh
Arabic-speaking youth from the city's ghettos and shantytowns, and the
protesters denounced the Algerian government in the name of all of the
country's peoples. The young rebels burned down government buildings and
fought with the police.

The most recent clashes took place in early December in Tizi Ouzou. After
the gendarmes used tear gas against people staging a sit-down protest at the
police headquarters, youth battled the police with rocks and Molotov
cocktails. The struggle of the youth has also gone up against the reformist
nationalist forces who hope to make some kind of a deal with the ruling
regime. And it has won the support of others in Algeria who oppose the
reactionary regime. A university professor in Kabylia said that the
government is "trying to ghetto-ize us. But the truth is, we are making
connections and finding support all over this country."

The uprising in Kabylia has developed at a time when unemployment and
poverty among the masses of people are skyrocketing--while the ruling class
enriches itself from selling oil and natural gas to the imperialists. The
Kabylia upsurge has also taken place in the context of a difficult situation
that has confronted the masses of people in Algeria for the past decade.

As A World to Win notes, "In 1992, at the behest of France, to which the
Algerian government is beholden, the ruling generals took power openly to
prevent the election of an Islamic regime. Since then, more than 100,000
people have been killed in the context of the conflict between the army and
Islamic armed groups. These Islamic forces are reactionaries seeking to
install a regime like that in Iran. Like their Iranian brethren, they have
no use for the masses and great willingness to cut a deal with imperialism,
including the U.S., which has maintained contacts with them. Both sides have
carried out massacres in the villages and murderous attacks on sectors of
the urban secular middle classes and intellectuals. It is often nearly
impossible to tell whether it is the bureaucrat capitalist regime or its
equally anti-people Islamic rivals who have committed the countless mass
murders and assassinations that have ceaselessly afflicted the people.

"It is into this gloomy situation that the people of Kabylia and the youth
in general have burst like avenging rays of sunlight."

---------------------------------


This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolutionary Worker Online
rwor.org 
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497
(The RW Online does not currently communicate via email.)



_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________

Reply via email to