Boualem Sansal was born on , in
Theniet El Had (during the
French colonial period), a village in the Ouarsenis Mountains, in
Algeria. His father, Abdelkader Sansal, is of
Moroccan origin and comes from a family in the
Rif region of Morocco that settled in Algeria. His mother, Khdidja Benallouche, received a French-style education. Boualem Sansal has an engineering degree from the
National Polytechnic School as well as a PhD in economics. He has worked as a teacher, consultant, business leader, and senior official at the Algerian Ministry of Industry. He began writing
novels at the age of 50 after retiring from his job as a high-ranking official in the Algerian government. The
assassination of President
Mohamed Boudiaf in 1992 and the rise of
Islamic fundamentalism in Algeria inspired him to write about his country. Sansal continues to live with his wife and two daughters in Algeria despite the controversy his books have aroused in his homeland.
2024 arrest In November 2024, Boualem Sansal was taken into custody in Algiers by the police on charges of "undermining national unity"; criminal proceedings were also brought against him. Sansal's arrest occurred in a context when
Algeria's relations with France were at an all time low. Sansal was charged with undermining Algeria's territorial integrity and economy, insulting authorities and possessing documents that endangered national interests. He was accused of undermining the integrity of Algerian territory, for having taken up, on Frontières, a French
far-right media outlet, Morocco's position according to which its territory had been amputated for the benefit of Algeria under French colonization. Shortly after Sansal's arrest, when his whereabouts were still uncertain, French President
Emmanuel Macron expressed concern about his situation:
Algeria Press Service, the Algerian government's news agency, responded with a scathing release that confirmed Sansal's arrest, called him a "denier" of his country's history and sovereignty, and accused the French government of being under the influence of an "anti-Algerian", "
Zionist" lobby. Literary figures, including four
Nobel Prize winners, demanded Sansal's release. In February, Algerian President
Abdelmadjid Tebboune mentioned that "Boualem Sansal is not an Algerian problem. It's a problem for those who created it [...] It's a sordid affair aimed at mobilizing against Algeria." In December 2024, Sansal, suffering from
prostate cancer, was transferred to a care unit. On January 23, 2025, the
European Parliament passed a resolution calling for his immediate release. Algerian lawmakers signed a statement rebuking the European Parliament's resolution, which they said contained "misleading allegations with the sole aim of launching a blatant attack against Algeria." The
Arab Parliament also condemned the European Parliament's resolution, calling it "irresponsible" and a "blatant and unacceptable interference" in Algeria's domestic affairs, and calling on the European Parliament to "respect the decisions of the Algerian judicial system." In February 2025, Sansal's French lawyer, François Zimeray, claimed that Sansal was going on a
hunger strike. In March 2025, Zimeray announced that he was going to the
UN to denounce Boualem Sansal's "arbitrary detention." Sansal's imprisonment also caused controversy in France, where several left-wing figures and organizations appeared reluctant to support him. Historian
Benjamin Stora commented that Sansal's statements had "hurt Algerian national feelings" and political scientist Nedjib Sidi Moussa claimed that Sansal was hostile to Muslims and immigrants, likening his positions to those of the
French far right.
La France Insoumise did not support the European Parliament's resolution, with 4 of its MEPs voting against it and 2 abstaining: one of them,
Rima Hassan, said she had voted against the resolution because Sansal's case was used by "the right and the far right". On March 4, the French
National Assembly passed a resolution calling for Sansal's release, with all left-wing MPs abstaining. On March 20, the
Dar El Beïda court requested ten years in prison for Sansal. Zimeray was not allowed to attend the audience. by giving sensitive information to the French ambassador in Algeria, In April 2025, his daughters, Nawal and Sabeha, who reside in
Prague with their Czech mother, officially requested a presidential pardon from Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune. Facilitated by Czech Ambassador Jan Czerný, the plea was submitted through the
Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but no response was received. In May 2025, the French National Assembly adopted a resolution calling for the "immediate and unconditional release" of Boualem Sansal, detained in Algeria. On 1 July 2025, an appeals court in Algeria confirmed the five-year prison sentence against Boualem Sansal. On November 11, 2025, President Tebboune pardoned Sansal following a request from German President
Frank-Walter Steinmeier. He was then released and taken to a hospital in Germany the next day. ==Choices, topics, impact==