Algeria detains leading opposition figure Karim Tabbou

Karim Tabbou, one of the most prominent if not the best-known figure of "Hirak", is greeted upon his release from prison on July 2, 2020, outside the Kolea Prison near the city of Tipasa, 70km west of the capital Algiers. (Photo by RYAD KRAMDI / AFP) (Photo by RYAD KRAMDI/AFP via Getty Images)

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By Our Foreign Desk

Opposition activist Karim Tabbou, a key figure in the vast protest movement that led to the resignation of longtime leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika, was detained late on Wednesday, according to his lawyer.

The 47-year-old was sentenced to a one-year suspended jail term last year. He will appear before a prosecutor on Thursday, lawyer Me Ali Fellah Benali said on social media.

Tabbou was summoned to the police station on Wednesday to respond to a complaint filed against him by Bouzid Lazhari, the president of the National Council for Human Rights (CNDH), an official body.

Algeria‘s youth is determined to fight for their right to a dignified life,” he told AFP ahead of his detention.

Tabbou became one of the most recognisable leaders at mass demonstrations that broke out in February 2019 over Bouteflika‘s plans to seek a fifth term in office.

The rallies, led by the so-called Hirak movement, continued well beyond Bouteflika’s resignation in April that year, and were only suspended when the coronavirus pandemic struck.

Since the group’s second anniversary in February, thousands have returned to the streets, defying a coronavirus ban on gatherings.

They are now “the largest political party” in the country, Tabbou said.

But his detention comes as activists warn of an increasing climate of repression, with political opponents and journalists targeted in the run-up to legislative elections in June.

Earlier this month, security forces arrested eight people they said were linked to the Hirak movement over an allegedly foreign-financed criminal association.

President Abdelmadjid Tebboune this month warned Hirak activists against “non-innocent activities” that “attempt to hinder the democratic process”.

He has called early elections for June 12 in response to Algeria’s political and socio-economic crisis, but Hirak supporters have denounced the vote as a “masquerade”

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