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The Tragedy of Algeria's Disappeared |
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The Independent
Robert Fisk
December 20, 2010
They are all over the wall of Naseera Dutour's office, in their
hundreds, in their thousands. There are cemeteries of them, bearded,
clean shaven, the youth and the elderly of Algeria, veiled women, a
smiling girl with a ribbon in her hair, in colour for the most part;
the bloodbath of the 1990s was a post-technicolor age so the blood
came bright red and soaked right through the great revolution that
finally conquered French colonial power.
There's a powerful irony that Naseera's cramped
offices "SOS Disparu", it's called, in conscious imitation of the
searches for the "disappeared" of Chile and Argentina should be on
the ground floor of an old pied noir apartment, beyond a carved
wooden door and patterned tiles, at No.3 rue Ghar Djebilet, just off
Didouch Mourad St. Didouch, too, was a martyr of the first
revolution, the one we were supposed to remember in Algiers this
month rather than all those faces on Naseera's walls. For Naseera,
too, has a martyr to mourn.
No talk at Algeria's anti-colonialism
conference of the 6,000 men and women who died under torture at the
hands of the Algerian police and army and hooded security men in the
1990s. For across at Sidi Fredj yes, just up the coast where the
French landed in 1830 le pouvoir was parading a clutch of ancient
ex-presidents from the mystical lands of the anti-colonial struggle,
to remind us of Algeria's primary role in the battle against world
imperialism. There was old Ahmed Ben Bella more white-haired
skeleton than Algeria's first leader, coup-ed out of power in 1965
(although they didn't mention that). There was poor old Dr Kenneth
Kaunda, who mercilessly tried to sing a song under the wondrous eyes
of Thabo Mbeki. And then there were the Vietnamese whose victory at
Dien Bien Phu taught the FLN (National Liberation Front) that they
could beat the French here, which they did in 1962 at a cost of,
say, one and a half million "martyrs".
In theory, this was all staged to celebrate the
60th anniversary of the UN General Assembly's Resolution 1514, which
demanded the right of independence to all colonised people (special
emphasis in Algiers, of course, on the Palestinians and the Sahrawi
refugees). But the real reason le pouvoir "the authorities"
gathered these elderly ex-presidents in Algeria was to build a new
foundation wood or concrete I haven't yet decided over the mass
graves of the 250,000 "martyrs" of another conflict, the barbarous
civil war of 1990-98, if indeed it has yet ended. Le pouvoir has
invented a wonderful new expression for this bloodbath. It's called
Algeria's "National Tragedy", as if the government's suspension of
elections and the brutal, family-slaughtering, throat-cutting war
with the savage Islamists of the Armed Islamic Group, the GIA, was a
Shakespearean play, Othello perhaps, or Hamlet in which, I suppose,
Ben Bella stares at his own skull. More like Titus Andronicus, if
you ask me.
Naseera Dutour's brave little team of girl
volunteers tap away on their laptops, listing yet more families who
seek the remains of those victims of the security forces for whom
all hope is gone. The cops drop by the office from time to time for
a spot of harassment, but they have no need to worry. Amina
Beuslimane, a pretty 28-year-old civil servant, supposedly taking
snapshots of cemeteries and blown-up buildings perhaps for
evidence of government crimes was arrested by security police on
13 December 1994. Her family were told they would not see her again
and she apparently ended up in the special interrogation and rape
centre at the Chateauneuf barracks. The butchers of Chateauneuf can
relax, however, because a post-war referendum that granted an
amnesty to the "Islamists" also purged the security forces of their
crimes. And besides, Amina's mum died a few days ago, so there's one
less memory to worry about.
I walked through the laneways of Algiers for
several days, in places a foreigner would not have survived 16 years
ago. In the Casbah, I visited the spot where poor Olivier Quemener,
a French television journalist whose camera sticks I had carried the
previous day, was shot dead by bearded "Islamists" in 1994, his
reporter colleague found lying wounded beside him, weeping over his
dead friend. Compared with all the civilians beheaded and raped by
the GIA outside Algiers, I suppose Quemener was spared the very
worst. As for the tough old cops of the 1990s who used to blast
water through men's throats until their stomachs burst, most must be
dead themselves, a few en retrait, as they say.
And some of the rapists from Chateauneuf, who
knows, through trails of promotion, may have been guarding the
equally old conference delegates at Sidi Fredj. And by the way,
Jacques Vergθs was there, he whose wife was so cruelly treated by
the French and who defended the Nazi butcher Klaus Barbie. Ironies
pile up here like old bones. And yes, the government won the civil
war, didn't they, and anyway who would have wanted the bearded
Islamic Salvation Front to have ruled back in the 1990s, imposing
sharia law and veiling women and murdering every opponent and,
besides, is not the pouvoir the real inheritor of the old National
Liberation Front, the FLN? In Algeria, they have a phrase for these
arguments. They call it "heating up old soup".
And so art comes to the rescue of memory. There
is a spring of new books being published in Algeria, novels of great
richness and beauty and sadness, the only way authors can confront
those mass graves of the 1990s. A veiled woman in a bright new
Algiers bookshop advises me to buy two of them. In Amin Zaoui's Bed
of the Impure Virgin, old florist Momou plying his trade, yes, on
the same Didouche Mourad St laments the 1973 murder of his old
poet friend Jean Sιnac. Believing that he will portray Senac in a
movie, Momou he loves only Algiers, flowers, wine and poetry
slowly goes mad, reciting Senac's verse in the streets and
tea-shops, ending in a small city courtyard beneath a tree where he
quotes night and day the words of Senac, a real anarchist and poet
and friend (yes, again!) of that old phantom Ben Bella who made his
return from the grave last week. But the courtyard is used for
prayers by the Islamists of the 1990s and because Senac was a "homo"
(their words) and because this is against Islam and because Momou
might have been Senac's lover, they string up the crazy florist from
the tree, and his body hangs there for three days and three nights
as the bearded men say their dawn prayers beneath his corpse. Do I
smell Camus here?
And then there's Adlθne Meddi's novel of
Algiers today in which two old soldiers (graduates of Algeria's
Cherchell Military College) reminisce of the 1990s and one of them
tells the other of a nightmare experience. In the Arab world, novels
are often fiction dusted with truth. In Algeria, they are truth
cloaked in fiction. Read then with appropriate horror Meddi's
description of the fate of an Algerian army commandant, Djaafar Rahb,
commander of the 2nd Armored Division at Tlegema, who deserts to the
"terrorists" and is caught and tied to a tree. The army commander
arrives from Constantine by helicopter, the soldiers are lined up,
the man's wife and two children are brought to the scene and the
soldiers pour petrol on Rahb and set him on fire, the cadets
vomiting at the stench of carbonised flesh.
What lies behind such writing? Meddi's hero is
Sjo, a retired cop who goes back to work to pay off his debts and
starts a murder enquiry that brings back all the ghosts of the
1990s. His journalist friend Ras, still mourning his professional
colleagues who had their throats slit by the GIA, walks with him
down an Algiers street, still fearful of the past. "Ras walked like
Djo. One eye in front, the other behind his head... Followed by
death for years, he had developed a strong sense of prudence and
impending disaster. Everything leaves its traces..."
And that is exactly how le pouvoir feels and
acts today, one confident eye to the future, one terrified eye to
the past, acting with prudence and with fear that the nightmares of
the 1990s may yet return. The earlier, great anti-colonial struggle
of which all Algerian delegates spoke was fought against the French.
Yet not once was the word "France" mentioned at the Sidi Fredj
conference. It cannot be, for while delegates were trucked off to
the concrete ghastliness of the 1954-62 "Martyr's Monument" to the
anti-French war of independence, another little journey by a
certain Abdelaziz Belkhadem, special representative to President
Bouteflika, who couldn't quite make it to the conference said a
lot more about modern Algeria.
Having stunned delegates with a speech of
mind-numbing boredom ("undeniable progress after the heavy burdens
of the colonial era", etc, etc), he sped off to the gaunt sepulchre
of the newly restored French cathedral of Our Lady of Africa,
consecrated at the height of French power in 1872, which still
towers gloomily over the city of Algiers. Desecrated by Islamists,
broken by a more recent earthquake, the whole place, once a symbol
of French Catholic domination of Muslim Algeria, has been
magnificently patched up and re-painted and re-tiled at a cost of
more than £4m by the European Union, the French Embassy and numerous
Algerian benefactors and reopened, heritage-style, as a monument
to coexistence. And there the man who had just condemned the heavy
burdens of colonialism stood with the French to commemorate this
great church and refused to read his speech.
Because, for so it was hinted, he didn't think
the French had given the Algerians enough credit for the
restoration? Or because he was standing next to another ghost, the
brave ex-archbishop of Algiers, Monseigneur Henri Teissier, he who
received the phone call on 21 May 1996 that the seven monks of
Tibherine now immortalised on film had been decapitated? "Three
of their heads were hanging from a tree near a petrol station," he
told me then. "The other four heads were lying on the grass
beneath." Now the French suspect the Algerian army tried to free the
monks from their GIA captors, killed them by mistake and covered up
their disaster by burying the bullet-riddled bodies and leaving
their heads behind as another GIA "crime".
The next Catholic edifice to be dusted off will
be the basilica of Saint Augustine at Annaba. For, like it or not,
the French have fallen in love with Algeria again and the
Algerians have fallen in love with the profits of a new relationship
with France. Former French prime minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin has
just been here to support long-term industrial projects a new
Renault factory is soon to open on the outskirts of Algiers and
Claude Guιant has been chatting up President Bouteflika on behalf of
Nicolas Sarkozy. And, now that France can join in the famous
"struggle against terror", ex-General Christian Quesnot has been
visiting, while the Ιlysιe has been busily handing over maps of
French colonial minefields to the Algerian army. French and Algerian
chiefs of staff regularly talk on the phone. Can this new affair
last? In Blida, the ancient guerrilla fighters are trying to
persuade the mayor to rename local streets after the seven Algerians
killed by French troops in a July 1961 anti-French demonstration.
Other guardians of the war the one before the "National Tragedy",
of course have been moving the grisly old French guillotine to the
Tlemcen museum so that "the youth of Algeria realise that their
independence came not as a gift but at a price". In his last
interview, the surviving French servant of this infernal machine
explained the importance of speed when decapitating Algerians for
if the victim struggled, the blade might not cut his neck and it
would be necessary to finish the job with a knife.
And all the while, the guns can be heard from
Tizi Ouzou. Yes, sure enough, the Islamists are still out there, the
GIA having long ago morphed into "al-Qa'ida in the Maghreb",
currently fighting off a division of Algerian troops beyond the
Berber capital, subject to a rattisage of armoured vehicles and
helicopter attacks, the villages marooned without food and with all
local mobile phones shut down by the government. "Twelve terrorists
killed", a headline reads in Al-Moujahed.
And where have we heard that before? Why, in
Iraq, of course. And in Afghanistan today. And throughout the
"National Tragedy". Only "terrorists", mark you. The army is
rumoured to have killed Abdelmalek Droukdel (alias Abu Mousaab
Abdelouadoud), al-Qa'ida's top man in Algeria, and thus, according
to the daily Liberte, "the operation ... constitutes a turning-point
in the anti-terrorist struggle". But we've heard all this before
too, after the government killed the "monster" Antan Zouabia and
after they shot Droukdel's predecessor Nabil Sahrawi. No "embeds"
with the Algerian army of course.
And if rumour is correct, there's every good
reason for this: because US Special Forces officers from their camp
near Tamanrasset are said to be "observing" the Kabyle operation.
Why not? After all, only last week Washington's top military
commander in the region, US Africa Command General David Hogg, was
showering praises on the Algerian security services for their
"impressive progress and leadership" in fighting "terrorism". He
wants more co-ordination with neighbouring Arab states which is
why Tunisia's top intelligence spook, one of Tunisian dictator Ben
Ali's most trusted acolytes, turned up to talk to his Algerian
opposite number this week.
And what, I asked Naseera Dutour, did she think
when she heard US officers praising the security services who
tortured and killed so many Algerians during the civil war? She
pulls out an old photograph of her 21-year old son Amin, kidnapped
on 31 January 1997 (he would be 35 today), never seen again, and
holds it to her bosom like a shield. She speaks in French but only
one word escapes her lips, loudly and with great emotion. "Scandale!"
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