Trump
- VV - Nov 30, 2025 - 10:21pm
What's your secret?
- haresfur - Nov 30, 2025 - 9:42pm
Home Alone
- haresfur - Nov 30, 2025 - 8:34pm
Cryptic Posts - Leave Them Guessing
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 8:02pm
YouTube: Music-Videos
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 7:40pm
Live Music
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 7:35pm
M.A.G.A.
- R_P - Nov 30, 2025 - 5:05pm
Beyond...
- montykat - Nov 30, 2025 - 4:47pm
China
- R_P - Nov 30, 2025 - 4:20pm
Radio Paradise NFL Pick'em Group
- islander - Nov 30, 2025 - 3:58pm
ChatGPT, etc. Good/bad uses?
- Steely_D - Nov 30, 2025 - 3:49pm
Suggestion
- gwillson - Nov 30, 2025 - 3:28pm
For a Limited Time Only - Sales and Bargains
- islander - Nov 30, 2025 - 1:43pm
Who is?
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 1:26pm
November 2025 Photo Theme: PERFORMANCE
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 1:24pm
Play the Blues
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 1:20pm
USA! USA! USA!
- R_P - Nov 30, 2025 - 1:09pm
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 12:45pm
What are you listening to now?
- SeriousLee - Nov 30, 2025 - 12:34pm
Radio Paradise Comments
- SeriousLee - Nov 30, 2025 - 11:48am
NYTimes Connections
- islander - Nov 30, 2025 - 10:46am
NY Times Strands
- GeneP59 - Nov 30, 2025 - 9:12am
Bug Reports & Feature Requests
- Hugrr - Nov 30, 2025 - 9:01am
Wordle - daily game
- GeneP59 - Nov 30, 2025 - 8:57am
Dreams - Tales from your sleep
- ColdMiser - Nov 30, 2025 - 8:57am
Today in History
- SeriousLee - Nov 30, 2025 - 6:08am
Radiohead
- oldviolin - Nov 30, 2025 - 5:24am
Classic TV Curiosities
- the_jake - Nov 29, 2025 - 8:37pm
RightWingNutZ
- R_P - Nov 29, 2025 - 7:50pm
The Obituary Page
- haresfur - Nov 29, 2025 - 6:55pm
TV shows you watch
- ScottFromWyoming - Nov 29, 2025 - 4:56pm
Things You Thought Today
- ScottFromWyoming - Nov 29, 2025 - 3:43pm
The War On Drugs = Fail
- R_P - Nov 29, 2025 - 2:39pm
BACK TO THE 80's
- joxmox - Nov 29, 2025 - 2:37pm
Prog Rockers Anonymous
- joxmox - Nov 29, 2025 - 2:31pm
Krautrock
- joxmox - Nov 29, 2025 - 2:30pm
Israel
- joxmox - Nov 29, 2025 - 2:24pm
Back to the 90's
- joxmox - Nov 29, 2025 - 1:56pm
Films you're excited about.
- Antigone - Nov 29, 2025 - 1:32pm
Nederlandstalige luisteraars?
- mannixj - Nov 29, 2025 - 1:18pm
Spambags on RP
- mannixj - Nov 29, 2025 - 1:08pm
new progressive rock....
- mannixj - Nov 29, 2025 - 1:00pm
songs that ROCK!
- lovehonk - Nov 29, 2025 - 12:37pm
Hockey + Fantasy Hockey
- SeriousLee - Nov 29, 2025 - 12:15pm
Wanna Race?
- lovehonk - Nov 29, 2025 - 12:11pm
King Crimson
- lovehonk - Nov 29, 2025 - 12:02pm
Gotta Get Your Drink On
- SeriousLee - Nov 29, 2025 - 11:51am
what the hell, miamizsun?
- oldviolin - Nov 29, 2025 - 11:43am
Favorite Quotes
- Honnie - Nov 29, 2025 - 11:40am
260,000 Posts in one thread?
- oldviolin - Nov 29, 2025 - 11:23am
Vinyl Only Spin List
- SeriousLee - Nov 29, 2025 - 10:52am
Words that should be put on the substitutes bench for a year
- SeriousLee - Nov 29, 2025 - 10:42am
~ Have a good joke you can post? ~
- SeriousLee - Nov 29, 2025 - 9:44am
Reviews and Pix from your concerts and shows you couldn't...
- steeler - Nov 29, 2025 - 6:38am
♥ ♥ ♥ Vote For Pie ♥ ♥ ♥
- KurtfromLaQuinta - Nov 28, 2025 - 9:21pm
Happy Thanksgiving!
- Steely_D - Nov 28, 2025 - 2:36pm
Artificial Intelligence
- kurtster - Nov 28, 2025 - 2:35pm
Musky Mythology
- R_P - Nov 28, 2025 - 12:39pm
RP Sanctuary
- SeriousLee - Nov 28, 2025 - 8:29am
Cause of Poverty
- R_P - Nov 27, 2025 - 10:58am
Europe
- R_P - Nov 27, 2025 - 10:17am
Outstanding Covers
- NoEnzLefttoSplit - Nov 27, 2025 - 8:42am
Name My Band
- GeneP59 - Nov 27, 2025 - 6:44am
Things I Saw Today...
- GeneP59 - Nov 27, 2025 - 6:43am
Dialing 1-800-Manbird
- oldviolin - Nov 27, 2025 - 6:27am
The All-Things Beatles Forum
- oldviolin - Nov 26, 2025 - 10:26pm
favorite love songs
- oldviolin - Nov 26, 2025 - 4:50pm
Breaking News
- Steely_D - Nov 26, 2025 - 1:08pm
Travel Tips.
- Steely_D - Nov 26, 2025 - 12:53pm
American Revolution
- maryte - Nov 26, 2025 - 11:54am
Jam! (why should a song stop)
- lovehonk - Nov 26, 2025 - 10:41am
Best Funk ?
- lovehonk - Nov 26, 2025 - 10:27am
Social Networking
- Honnie - Nov 26, 2025 - 10:03am
Old Time and Folk
- Honnie - Nov 26, 2025 - 9:57am
Forum Posting Guidelines
- lovehonk - Nov 26, 2025 - 9:49am
|
|
Index »
Regional/Local »
Africa/Middle East »
Algeria
|
|
nuggler

Location: RU Sirius ? Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 14, 2011 - 5:01am |
|
 | | Opposition groups say they will hold protests every Saturday calling for change of government |
The Algerian government has said it will end its 19-year-old state of emergency "within days". Mourad Medelci, the foreign minister, made the announcement on Monday, echoing a similar promise made by Abdelaziz Bouteflika, the president, earlier this month. "In the coming days, we will talk about it as if it was a thing of the past," Medelci told French rmedia. A state of emergency has been in place in Algeria since 1992 and the government has come under pressure to remove the laws following popular uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia. (...)
|
|
nuggler

Location: RU Sirius ? Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 14, 2011 - 4:59am |
|
|
|
HazzeSwede

Location: Hammerdal Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 13, 2011 - 12:37am |
|
Here's CIAs' take on the country. (also a cannabis producer of proportions) CIA don't know that ?  Also.. Some papers report's 10 000 protesters and four to five hundred arrested.
|
|
R_P

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 13, 2011 - 12:04am |
|
|
|
R_P

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 12, 2011 - 7:19pm |
|
Yesterday Egypt, today AlgeriaThis was the slogan of the brave protesters in Algiers on Saturday, making the first breach in Algeria's wall of fear A protester chants slogans during the demonstration in the Algerian capital, Algiers, on 12 February 2011, encircled by hundreds of riot police intent on preventing any repetition of events in Cairo, Egypt. Photograph: Reuters/Zohra Bensemra Algiers – In the wake of Friday's historic events in Cairo, over 1,000 peaceful demonstrators defied a ban on protests in Algiers on the Place de 1er Mai on Saturday. The goal of the National Coordination Committee for Change and Democracy, the organisers of what was supposed to have been a march to Martyr's Square, was to call for an end to the 19-year state of emergency, for democratic freedoms, and for a change in Algeria's political system. Invigorated by Cairo's great event, this Saturday in Algiers they chanted slogans like "Djazair Horra Dimocratia" ("A free and democratic Algeria"), "système dégage" ("government out") and indeed, "Yesterday Egypt, today Algeria". (...)
|
|
R_P

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 12, 2011 - 2:56pm |
|
Algeria’s Internet, Facebook Shut Down As Unrest IntensifiesProtests in Algeria intensified today, and the Algerian government responded by deleting Facebook accounts and shutting down Internet service providers across the country. In a volatile situation similar to that which brought down former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, the Algerian government has dispatched 30,000 riot police in Algiers, and is resorting to tear gas and plastic bullets to try to discourage dissent, according to The Telegraph. Algerians are calling this uprising the “February 12 Revolution,” as they protest government corruption, massive unemployment, housing problems and poverty. They would like to oust Algerian President Abdelaziz Boutifleka, whose police forces are also trying to silence journalists, according to The Telegraph. From what we’ve seen so far, shutting down the Internet and deleting Facebook accounts is not going to work. We’re thinking this is just one of many revolutions that are about to sweep the Middle East.
|
|
triskele

Location: The Dragons' Roost 
|
|
Posted:
Feb 12, 2011 - 8:29am |
|
RichardPrins wrote:Pro-democracy rally begins in Algeria, defying banThousands of people are holding a pro-democracy rally in Algeria's capital Algiers, defying a government ban.
Scuffles broke out between the protesters and riot police and a number of people were reportedly arrested.
Algeria - like Egypt, Tunisia and other countries in the region - has recently witnessed demonstrations for greater freedoms and better living standards.
Public demonstrations are banned in Algeria because of a state of emergency still in place since 1992. Heavy police presence
The protesters gathered at Algiers' 1 May Square on Saturday morning.
They chanted "Bouteflika out!" - in reference to the country's President Abdelaziz Bouteflika.
Some demonstrators waved copies of a newspaper front page with the headline about the ousting of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on Friday, Reuters reports.
About 30,000 police are reportedly deployed in and around capital, and extra police with water cannons are on stand-by.
At least 15 police vans, jeeps and buses were lined up at the square and about the same number on a nearby side-street outside the city's Mustapha hospital.
Small military-style armoured vehicles were also parked at junctions around the city.
There is also said to be a crowd of supporters of President Bouteflika on the streets.
On Friday, the authorities stopped people from gathering to celebrate the fall of Mr Mubarak.
The authorities want to avert any popular uprising similar to those in Tunisia and Egypt, as some Algerians say it is time to seize the moment, the BBC's Chloe Arnold in Algiers says.
However, others here say there is less of an appetite for political upheaval than in other countries in the region, our correspondent adds.
Algeria has a bloody recent history: it is emerging from two decades of violence with as many as 250,000 people losing their lives in a conflict between security forces and Islamist militants.
Earlier this month, President Bouteflika said the country's state of emergency would be lifted in the "very near future".
Mr Bouteflika made the announcement at a meeting with government ministers in the capital Algiers, according to the country's state-run media.
He said protests would be allowed everywhere in the country except in the capital. Some people report the blocking of Facebook and Twitter. 
Thanks for starting this thread!
|
|
R_P

Gender:  
|
|
Posted:
Feb 12, 2011 - 8:19am |
|
Pro-democracy rally begins in Algeria, defying banThousands of people are holding a pro-democracy rally in Algeria's capital Algiers, defying a government ban.
Scuffles broke out between the protesters and riot police and a number of people were reportedly arrested.
Algeria - like Egypt, Tunisia and other countries in the region - has recently witnessed demonstrations for greater freedoms and better living standards.
Public demonstrations are banned in Algeria because of a state of emergency still in place since 1992. Heavy police presence
The protesters gathered at Algiers' 1 May Square on Saturday morning.
They chanted "Bouteflika out!" - in reference to the country's President Abdelaziz Bouteflika.
Some demonstrators waved copies of a newspaper front page with the headline about the ousting of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on Friday, Reuters reports.
About 30,000 police are reportedly deployed in and around capital, and extra police with water cannons are on stand-by.
At least 15 police vans, jeeps and buses were lined up at the square and about the same number on a nearby side-street outside the city's Mustapha hospital.
Small military-style armoured vehicles were also parked at junctions around the city.
There is also said to be a crowd of supporters of President Bouteflika on the streets.
On Friday, the authorities stopped people from gathering to celebrate the fall of Mr Mubarak.
The authorities want to avert any popular uprising similar to those in Tunisia and Egypt, as some Algerians say it is time to seize the moment, the BBC's Chloe Arnold in Algiers says.
However, others here say there is less of an appetite for political upheaval than in other countries in the region, our correspondent adds.
Algeria has a bloody recent history: it is emerging from two decades of violence with as many as 250,000 people losing their lives in a conflict between security forces and Islamist militants.
Earlier this month, President Bouteflika said the country's state of emergency would be lifted in the "very near future".
Mr Bouteflika made the announcement at a meeting with government ministers in the capital Algiers, according to the country's state-run media.
He said protests would be allowed everywhere in the country except in the capital. Some people report the blocking of Facebook and Twitter.
|
|
|