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Le Monde
Le Monde
10 Sep 2024


Images Le Monde.fr

The Islamist candidate who lost out to incumbent Abdelmadjid Tebboune in Algeria's presidential election filed an appeal to the Constitutional Court on Tuesday, September 10, contesting the provisional result of the vote.

Abdelaali Hassani, who heads the moderate Islamist party the Movement of Society for Peace (MSP), said the day before he had "lost the battle but not the war" and denounced the results as a "fraud."

The North African country's electoral authority, the ANIE, announced on Sunday that Tebboune had won "94.65% of the vote," with Hassani garnering 3.17% and Aouchiche 2.16%.

Hassani earlier denounced what he called "false figures" on voter turnout and demanded that the authorities put an end to the "masquerade."

He was one of just two challengers to Tebboune in Saturday's election, the second being Youcef Aouchiche of the center-left Socialist Forces Front (FFS), who is also expected to appeal.

Tebboune, 78, had been widely expected to breeze through the election and was focused instead on securing a high turnout. He was elected in December 2019 with 58% of the vote, despite a record abstention rate above 60%, amid the massive Hirak pro-democracy protests.

More than 24 million Algerians had been registered to vote in this election, but ANIE did not say how many people turned out. Instead, it announced a "provisional average turnout" rate of 48%, which many including Hassani and Aouchiche have disputed.

The Constitutional Court is set to announce the final results within 10 days of receiving the count from Algeria's 58 provinces. On Monday, it said it had yet to receive all of them.

Le Monde with AFP