Late January 2011 A number of left-wing opposition parties, including the
FFS, RCD,
PLJ, and the Communist
MDS, as well as the
Algerian League for Human Rights (LADDH) and officially unrecognised unions, such as SATEF and SNAPAP, met on 20 January to discuss responses to the situation. On 21 January, several of them (excluding the FFS) formed the
Coordination Nationale pour le Changement et la Démocratie (National Coordination for Change and Democracy), seeking systemic change within the country) for nationwide marches, starting 9 February. The Interior Minister,
Ould Kablia, responded that "No march would be authorised by the authorities in Algiers... Marches are forbidden in Algiers." Meanwhile, the mainly
Kabyle-based secularist
RCD party had announced plans for a march for democracy to be held on Saturday 22 January, despite being refused permission by the government) or 19 (according to the Interior Ministry) were injured, and 9, including the head of the party's parliamentary group Othman Amazouz, were arrested, to be released later the same day. Some demonstrators waved the
Tunisian flag, alluding to the protests which had brought down Ben Ali. Would-be demonstrators coming from
Tizi Ouzou were prevented from reaching the scene by the police. On 22 January, 20,000 police officers stopped all protests. In the ensuing clash five people were killed and more than 800 others hurt. students of
Tizi-Ouzou announced plans for a march on 1 February demanding their release and economic development for Kabylie. On 29 January, the RCD organised a march of over ten thousand people (according to the organisers) in the city of
Bejaia, to demand more freedom and democracy.
Early February 2011 Protests continued on 3 February. On the same day President Abdelaziz Bouteflika signaled at a meeting with government ministers his intention to lift the 19-year-old state of emergency in the "very near future", in what was seen as an attempt to quell opposition demands. Reportedly, he also urged the cabinet to adopt measures to promote job creation and said Algeria's TV and radio should give airtime to all political parties. On 4 February,
Al Jazeera reported that demonstrations were planned for 12 February. While Bouteflika was said to be working to counter the planned demonstration, on 8 February university students commenced an "indefinite strike" in protest against the "poor quality of teaching." On the same day, an indefinite strike was also launched by professional paramedics after a call by the trade union SAP. However, it was reported to have been observed in only 22 of the country's 48 provinces.
12 February The day after Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak resigned, the protest gained new currency. The protests were organised by the nascent National Co-ordination for Change and Democracy, an umbrella group of opposition parties, civil society groups and unofficial unions. and put in a security cordon around
May First Square in central Algiers. clashed with about 30,000 police at May First Square in central Algiers. Police fired tear gas including
human rights activists and
trade union members. The Algerian League for the Defense of Human Rights said that up to 28,000 police officers were deployed in Algiers. of the RCD, were injured. Protesters had hoped to stay the night at the main square. At almost 19:30,
Thomson Reuters reported hundreds of people were leaving the demonstrations after about three hours and that the police opened their cordon to let them pass. It also said that about 200 young men from a poor neighbourhood stayed on and that some of them threw objects at the police. Protests were also reported in
Constantine,
Annaba, and
Oran. There were reports of internet services like Twitter, Facebook and the wider internet to have been disrupted or shut down, however,
Renesys denied this had taken place.
Saïd Sadi of the
RCD interpreted the large number of police as government weakness, stating, "When you mobilize 30,000 police in the capital, that's a sign of weakness, not strength." the CNCD called for protests to continue every Saturday in the same square in Algiers, a call confirmed by RCD spokesman Mohsen Belabbes; Ali Yahia Abdennour said that "we will gather momentum as we progress we want our dignity back, yesterday the police has brutally beaten many protesters amongst them a pregnant women, old ladies, a journalist, young men and women, we should carry on protesting until we get our rights." The next day the activist blogger Hchicha called for alternative marches on Friday as well, meant to attract people wanting a change of system but distrusting the political parties involved in the CNCD. Elias Filali reported that police had used tear gas to disperse protesters and to evict families who had occupied newly constructed homes overnight in Algiers. On 14 February, Foreign Minister
Mourad Medelci said the state of emergency would be lifted "within days." Two days later, Prime Minister
Ahmed Ouyahia announced the state of emergency would be lifted by the end of February. Former FLN leader
Abdelhamid Mehri called for true democracy, saying the current regime was incapable of solving the country's problems. On 18 February, a date for which a
Facebook group had called for protests, police with water cannons were deployed in the main crossroads of Algiers.
Late February Thousands turned out in Algiers for protests but were unable to take control of the main square. The government officially announced the end of the emergency rule. The country's council of ministers adopted a law revoking the 1993 decree that prolonged a state of emergency originally instituted the previous year, stating that the "law will come into effect as soon as its imminent publication in the official journal". The state of emergency in the country was officially lifted after being published in the country's
official journal, responding to one of the main demands of the protesters. The move legalizes protests outside the capital of Algiers, as long as the government is notified of planned demonstrations at least three days in advance. The
Algerian League for the Defense of Human Rights, a leader of the protests, said it was a "ruse aimed at fooling international opinion at a time when Arab regimes are under pressure." On 5 March, protests organised by the
National Co-ordination for Democracy and Change in Algiers were violently suppressed while in al-Madania neighbourhood of
Algiers, a group of youths, wearing banners supporting Abdelaziz Bouteflika, tried to lynch opposition leader
Said Sadi, the president of the
Rally for Culture and Democracy. Meanwhile, Algeria's oldest opposition party,
Socialist Forces Front, has urged Algerians to engage in a "peaceful struggle" for change in the nation. On 7 March, thousands of community police rallied in the capital Algiers despite a protest ban in the city, accusing the government of ingratitude, and insisting thousands of their colleagues have been killed or injured fighting Islamist violence. Demanding better pay and pensions, they got all the way to the Parliament building. In Algiers, small group of around 150 or so threw
Molotov cocktails at much larger crowd of police. On 23 March, police in the Algiers suburb of Oued Koriche used tear gas on Wednesday to disperse a crowd of young men who threw stones and
Molotov cocktails trying to stop bulldozers from demolishing dozens of illegally built homes. Five police officers were injured in the rioting, during which rioters threw bricks down on police from nearby rooftop and set fire to a car.
April–May On 15 April, in a long-awaited televised address, President Abdelaziz Bouteflika said he would seek constitutional amendments that would "reinforce representative democracy" and be submitted to parliament or to a referendum. He also proposed changes to laws on elections, the media or political parties. On 11 May, 1,500 Doctors attempted to march towards government buildings but were prevented by anti-riot police.
February 2012 In late February 2012, Algeria's major
Islamist parties announced a coalition ahead of
parliamentary elections. A leader of the
Movement of Society for Peace called for more opposition parties to join the alliance "to give the best possible chance for the Arab Spring to happen in Algeria as well". ==Local protests over jobs and infrastructure==