Bouteflika’s health woes stir calls for polls

FILE - This Monday, April 28, 2014, file photo shows Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika waving after taking oath as President in Algiers. The absence of ailing Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika in the aftermath of the kidnap and murder of a French hiker has re-ignited the debate over his fitness to rule this oil-rich North African nation that is a key ally in the fight against terror. Despite suffering from a stroke last year and being largely absent from the election campaign, Bouteflika still won a fourth term in April but has been barely seen since. (AP Photo/Sidali Djarboub, File)

FILE - This Monday, April 28, 2014, file photo shows Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika waving after taking oath as President in Algiers. The absence of ailing Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika in the aftermath of the kidnap and murder of a French hiker has re-ignited the debate over his fitness to rule this oil-rich North African nation that is a key ally in the fight against terror. Despite suffering from a stroke last year and being largely absent from the election campaign, Bouteflika still won a fourth term in April but has been barely seen since. (AP Photo/Sidali Djarboub, File)

Published Nov 19, 2014

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Algiers -

A coalition of Algerian opposition parties and political figures has called for new presidential elections because of the frequent hospitalisations of the country's leader.

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 77, was elected to a fourth term in April, but he has rarely appeared in public since suffering from a stroke in 2013. He was briefly hospitalised in France last weekend.

Tuesday's opposition statement said the leader's absence is a sign of the “serious crisis in the country”.

The coalition, which includes Islamist and secular opposition parties, and former government ministers, also called for an independent commission to oversee elections.

The government has in the past ignored opposition claims that the president is too ill to govern.

The oil-rich North African country is a key US ally in the fight against extremists. - Sapa-AP

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