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Algerian massacre
site 'erased' by the police |
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The Guardian
Giles Tremlett
January 26, 2004
The Algerian authorities have erased the first evidence to
appear of the graves of the hundreds, if not thousands, of
people believed to have been kidnapped and killed by army-backed
anti-Islamist militias in the 1990s, according to human rights
campaigners.
Campaigners who secretly dug up a mass grave near the western
town of Relizane last November, and who claim to have identified
one militia victim buried there, said the site had since been
cleaned out by police.
The police now refuse to acknowledge the grave's existence.
But the human rights campaigners have photographic evidence,
some of which the Guardian publishes today, showing the bones
and clothing found near Relizane.
It is the first public evidence of what campaigners believe
is the last resting place of some 200 victims from Relizane,
while thousands of other victims of state-backed militias are
thought to be in similar graves elsewhere.
The scandal comes as pressure grows on President Abdelaziz
Bouteflika, who is leading Algeria towards renewed acceptance by
the west, to investigate the role of the so-called Patriot
militias in the civil conflict that claimed 120,000 lives in the
1990s.
The pressure comes from the families of the disappeared and
from international groups such as Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch which want a full and public investigation
into the fate of up to 7,000 people said to have gone missing
after being picked up by the authorities.
Mr Bouteflika is also facing opposition from army hardliners
to his attempts to be re-elected president in April.
The grave near Relizane was discovered in November after
local people told human rights campaigners they had seen bones
sticking out of the soil under some trees two miles south of the
village of Sidi Mohammed Benaouda.
Mohammed Smain, a local human rights campaigner who has waged
a long campaign to find out what happened to 212 people
allegedly taken by an infamous local militia boss, led a team
which dug up the site.
"I don't know how many bodies might have been there, but we
found bones and clothes," Mr Smain told the Guardian in a
telephone interview from Relizane.
Among the items found were the green waterproof over-trousers
worn by a local man, Saidane Abed, when he was detained by the
local militia boss, Mohammed Fergane, on September 9 1996. A
cigarette lighter found at the scene was identified by family
members as belonging to Saidane Abed.
His son, Mohammed, told a press conference in Algiers last
month: "My father was taken at nine o'clock in the morning, in
front of me and other witnesses by Fergane ... He was taken away
in a vehicle belonging to the Relizane local administration.
There was no trace of him after that until Mr Smain found the
mass grave in November."
The family and the Algerian Human Rights Defence League took
the case to the local court in Oued Rhiou, where the district
attorney ordered police to investigate. When they failed to turn
up for a visit to the grave site on January 11, Mr Smain went
there and found it intact. However when he returned to the site
with the police the next day, the grave had been stripped bare.
"There is nothing left. It has all disappeared," he said.
"The police wanted to make all the bones disappear in order
to make it impossible for any scientific analysis that might
identify the dead person or determine the cause of death," he
claimed.
Mr Smain called for the intervention of the shadowy figures,
many of them former generals, considered to be the real powers
in Algeria, and who are collectively known as les décideurs ,
the deciders.
"It is clear that the people in power have no will to resolve
the drama of the kidnappings and forced disappearances of
peaceable citizens, confirming the fact that nothing can be done
without the décideurs, and less still against them," he said.
The Algerian Human Rights Defence League has called for a
judicial inquiry into what happened to the remains of Saidane
Abed and others who may have shared his grave.
Mr Bouteflika set up a commission to investigate the
disappearances, including those caused by the Islamist groups
that brought their own savage terror to the country, but Human
Rights Watch last month criticised it as having "largely passive
powers". In the meantime, the relatives of those killed by the
security forces or their allies are under pressure to remain
silent, or to say that those killed were victims of the
Islamists, campaigners said. Family members, nevertheless, hold
protests most weeks in Algiers.
The interior ministry admits the existence of 4,950
"disappeared", but claims many either joined the Islamists or
were snatched by them.
After managing to get Algerian newspapers to report the
discovery of the grave, campaigners hoped the army and police
would allow a proper inquiry into the Relizane killings, since
these did not involve state security forces directly.
When Mr Smain claimed to have found other graves in the area
three years ago, police confiscated his camera and wiped clean
the sites, leaving him with no proof of the claim. He was then
successfully sued for libel by Mr Fergane and given a one-year
jail sentence.
Mr Fergane was arrested in 1998 on the order of a military
judge from Oran, but was freed 10 days later after Patriot
militiamen from around the country protested in Algiers.
The civil war, sparked by the army's decision to cancel
elections in 1992 in order to abort the probable victory of a
Muslim fundamentalist party, rumbles on at a low level, but the
army is widely considered to have won the battle.
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