|
Ahmed Ouyahia أحمد أويحيى |
|
![]() |
|
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Incumbent | |
|
Assumed office 23 June 2008 |
|
| President | Abdelaziz Bouteflika |
| Preceded by | Abdelaziz Belkhadem |
|
In office 05 May 2003 – 24 May 2006 |
|
| President | Abdelaziz Bouteflika |
| Preceded by | Ali Benflis |
| Succeeded by | Abdelaziz Belkhadem |
|
In office 31 December 1995 – 15 December 1998 |
|
| President | Liamine Zéroual |
| Preceded by | Mokdad Sifi |
| Succeeded by | Smail Hamdani |
|
|
|
| Born | 2 July 1952 Bouadnane, Tizi Ouzou Province, Algeria |
| Political party | RND |
Ahmed Ouyahia (Arabic: أحمد أويحيى) (born July 2, 1952) is an Algerian politician who has been Prime Minister of Algeria since June 2008. He was previously Prime Minister from 1995 to 1998 and from 2003 to 2006.[1] A career diplomat, he also served as Minister of Justice, and was one of the founders and a president of the RND party. He is considered by Western observers as close to the Military of Algeria and a member of the "eradicator" faction in the 1990s civil war against Islamist militants.[2]
Contents |
Ouyahia was born in the village of Bouadnane in the Wilaya of Tizi Ouzou in the Kabylie region of Algeria.[2] Following a primary education starting in Algiers in the academic year 1958/1959 and ending in the academic year 1964/1965, Ouyahia followed a secondary education at the Lycee El Idrissi in Algiers starting from the academic year 1965/1966. Ouyahia obtained his diploma of Baccalauréat ès-lettres in 1972.
In 1972, Ahmed Ouyahia joined the entry examination for the "Ecole Nationale d'Administration" of Algiers. Having scored among the top three applicants, along with Ahmed Attaf, Ouyahia joined the Ecole Nationale d'Administration and specialised in Diplomacy.[1] He graduated in 1976 and did his military service from 1976 to 1978, at the El Mouradia compound of the Algerian Presidency where he was a member of the press relations team.[1]
In 1979 Ouyahia joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and was assigned to the African Affairs Department.[1] In 1980 he was sent as an adviser for foreign affairs to the ambassador of Algeria in Côte d'Ivoire, where he served until 1982.[1] In 1982 he was assigned as a foreign affairs advisor to the Head of the Permanent Mission of Algeria at the United Nations Headquarters in New York.[1] In 1988 Ouyahia became the general director of the African Department of the Algerian Foreign Affairs Ministry.[1] From 1988 to 1989 Ouyahia was co-representative to the United Nations Security Council.[2] He was an adviser to the Algerian Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1990 to 1991.[2]
He led the African Department until 1991,[1] when he was sent as Algeria's ambassador to Mali from 1992 to 1993.[2] There he helped negotiate a 1992 peace deal in the Malian Tuareg Rebellion between the warring Malian government of Alpha Oumar Konaré and the Azawad Tuareg movement: the short lived "Pacte National" treaty. In August 1993, Ouyahia was called back to Algiers to serve in the government of Redha Malek as Under Secretary of State for African and Arab Affairs, Secretary of State for Cooperation and Maghreb Affairs.[1]
In April 1994 he was nominated as the Cabinet Director of President Liamine Zeroual,[2] where he was in charge of political affairs such as the negotiations with the leaders of the banned Islamic Salvation Front party (FIS) and the preparations of the 1995 presidential elections that President Liamine Zeroual won in November 1995. His role in as a member of the so-called "eradicator" faction, advocating all out war against the insurgency during the Algerian Civil War that killed more than 150,000 on both sides,[3] earned him criticism by some Western Human Rights groups.[2] He is particularly associated with the creation in the late 1990s of the GLD citizen militias ("Legitimate Defence Groups", "Groupes de légitime défense").[4][5]
In December 1995 Ouyahia was nominated as Prime Minister and held that position until December 1998,[1] when he resigned following the election of Abdelaziz Bouteflika to the presidency of Algeria. The economic condition of Algeria in the late 1990s, as well as a wave of public sector strikes, contributed to his increasing unpopularity as Prime Minister[6][7] and his December 1998 resignation. As well, opposition parliamentarians accused Ouyahia of rigging the 1997 elections.[8][9]
In 2000 Ouyahia was elected leader of his party, the National Rally for Democracy (RND), which he had earlier helped to found.[2]
He was Minister of State and Justice from 1999 to 2002[2] under Bouteflika's first government. During this time Ouyahia was assigned the task of securing a peace deal in the war between Ethiopia and Eritrea by Bouteflika, who was also President of Organisation for African Unity during the year 2000. Ouyahia worked in conjunction with Anthony Lake, former National Security Advisor to President Bill Clinton of the United States, and a peace deal was secured and signed in Algiers in December 2000. [2]
A strong defender of the government, in February 2001, Ouyahia proposed new laws as Justice Minister which would have imposed a 3 year prison term for authors of articles or drawings deemed "defamatory" to political leaders.[10]
In June 2002, following the defeat of the RND in the 2002 parliamentary election, Ouyahia resigned and was nominated in the next government as Minister of State and Special Representative of the President, an honorary position entailing no governing power. In May 2003, Ouyahia was nominated as Prime Minister for a second time, following a political crisis between President Bouteflika and Prime Minister Ali Benflis, who was dismissed. Ouyahia served as Prime Minister for three years,[1] until his resignation on May 24, 2006 amidst political arguments between Ouyahia's political party and Bouteflika's political party, the FLN.
Starting on October 14 2003 and lasting through November, the National Council of Secondary and Technical Education Professors (CNAPEST) and the Secondary School Council of Algiers (CLA) went on strike over low wages. Education Minister Boubekeur Benbouzid, backed by Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia, refused to meet with representatives of either union because they were not officially recognized. Instead, the Government ordered the suspension of more than 300 teachers and threatened further sanctions. only after the officially recognized UGTA affiliate National Federation of Education Workers (FNTE) joined the strike did the agree to raise wages.[11]
The domestic press again asserted that his May 2006 resignation was due to public unpopularity after his opposition to public sector strikes, his opposition to a plan put forward by the rival FNL to raise salaries, and by his support for privatisation of industries.[12]
In June 2004, Ouyahia called Al-Jazeera television, recently closed indefinitely by his government "a channel whose sole aim was to tarnish Algeria's image." The channel had broadcast several reports critical of the government the week prior to its closeur.[13]
From 1993 to 2000, around 4,000 men and women “disappeared” in Algeria after being arrested my security forces.[14] Ouyahia has been accused by Western Human rights groups of downplaying the number missing and criticised for claiming that "a large number of the so-called disappeared were in fact in the ranks of terrorist groups."[15][16]
Ouyahia has been widely credited with mediating a longstanding dispute between Berber leaders from his native Kabylie and the government. In 2005 the government took steps to defuse tensions with the Kabylie and address the concerns of regional leaders. In particular, Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia reached agreement on a number of Kabylie grievances with Arouch leader Belaid Abrika, who had been physically assaulted during a public protest rally and seriously injured in 2003 by members of government security services. The accord addressed economic and social concerns and made possible regional elections in November 2005.[17] [18] Ouyahia made a number of visits to opposition leaders, and reached out in the Berber language media for reconciliation.[19]
After some prominent involvement in international diplomatic meetings earlier in 2008, Ouyahia was again named Prime Minister by Bouteflika on June 23, 2008.[1] On this occasion, he pledged "to continue to apply the policy programme of the President of the Republic".[20] The foreign and domestic press have commented on the sometime stormy relations between Ouyahia and Bouteflika, which has not stood in the way of his Prime Ministership.[21]
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Mokdad Sifi |
Prime Minister of
Algeria 1995 – 1998 |
Succeeded by Smail Hamdani |
| Preceded by Ali Benflis |
Prime Minister of
Algeria 2003 – 2006 |
Succeeded by Abdelaziz Belkhadem |
| Preceded by Abdelaziz Belkhadem |
Prime Minister of
Algeria 2008 – present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
|
|||||||
|
|