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by Staff Writers Algiers (AFP) June 21, 2020
An Algerian soldier was killed during a clash with armed Islamists in the central region of Ain Defla, the defence ministry said Sunday, adding that an operation was still underway. An army detachment clashed with "an armed terrorist group", during an ambush Saturday in the Gaadet Lahdjar area, in the prefecture of Ain Defla, killing corporal Mostafa Znanda, the ministry said in a statement. Algerian authorities use the term "terrorist" to describe armed Islamists who have been active in the country since the early 1990s. Security measures have been taken to seal and search the area and pursue the "criminals", the ministry added. In May, the army announced it had killed two Islamists in the Ain Defla prefecture and seized weapons, ammunition and food products. And in February, an Algerian soldier was killed in a car bomb attack in Timiaouine, in the south of the country on the border with Mali. The army regularly announces the arrest or death of militants in different regions of the country. In 2019, it said it had killed 15 armed Islamists and arrested 25 others, while another 44 had handed themselves in to authorities. A civil war during the 1990s pitted Islamist militants against the Algerian government, leaving 200,000 people dead. Despite a 2005 charter for peace and reconciliation designed to turn the page on the conflict, armed Islamist groups still remain active in some areas of the country, largely targeting security forces.
Algeria weighs plan to allow army deployments abroad Algiers (AFP) June 18, 2020 Could Algeria soon send troops from its army, the pillar of the regime, to join peace-keeping missions led by the United Nations or African Union? President Abdelmadjid Tebboune has urged a constitutional change that would allow deployments abroad, signalling a departure from a military doctrine that has barred interventions outside national borders. The proposal by a government under continued pressure from a pro-democracy movement has sparked concerns about ending a cherished tradition of non- ... read more
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