France wants to sacrifice B, Amira Bouraoui and hand her over to Algeria and surprise Ihsan Qadi
New developments in the case of the Algerian machete, Amira Bouraoui, after the name of Amira Bouraoui overshadowed the good relations between France and Algeria.
As the French authorities are currently planning to reconcile Algeria and preserve the relationship between France and Algeria, after the visit of French President Emmanuel Macron to Algeria a few weeks ago.
As France 24 announced, France wants to sacrifice Princess Bouraoui and hand her over to Algeria in order to complete her trial.
The plane on which the French journalist and activist, who holds Algerian nationality, was fleeing, landed in Paris, coming from Tunis.
Amira Bouraoui had spent three days in pretrial detention in Algeria, awaiting trial on charges of illegally crossing the border into Algeria.
Where she fled for fear of arrest in the midst of a crackdown on independent journalism, which saw the arrest of two people, prominent independent journalists Ihsan al-Qadi and Saad Bouakaba.
Amira Bouraoui, a fierce opponent of the Algerian regime, was released after she testified before the court.
So the judge decided to postpone her case until February 23, but according to her defense, two lawyers immediately took her from the judge's office.
Deportation to Algeria was still on the table, but the protection of the French diplomatic corps halted the procedure in extreme cases.
Paris' pressure on President Kais Saied and the rest of the administration paid off.
The case began after journalist Amira Bouraoui was transferred to the French Embassy in Tunis.
Then they extracted permission from Tunisian President Kais Said to allow her to travel to Paris.
Amira Bourawi's lawyer, Hashim Badra, later explained to the French newspaper Le Monde that the fate of Al-Barawi hung in the balance during those hours.
“I am very satisfied with this happy outcome, which I did not believe in,” the Tunisian lawyer admitted, telling the media that he was “free and well.” The intervention of the French state has tipped the balance.
This is not the first time that Amira Bouraoui name has come to the fore. She became the 46-year-old gynecologist, who described herself as "the disaffected citizen and daughter of a high-ranking army officer".
Known in opposition circles to the late Abdelaziz Bouteflika's regime on the social network Facebook.
Along with other opposition figures, he led the El Barakat movement, a social protest that broke out in opposition to a fourth presidential term for Bouteflika.
El Barraoui was active in the Hirak protests that broke out four years ago to force Bouteflika to resign to run for a fifth term.
Although she spent months in prison after being convicted of several charges, including "insulting" Islam due to her Facebook posts.
She was released in July 2020, but under a ban on leaving the country.
But she tried several times to visit her son, who lives in France. But without success. Since September.
She presents a weekly political program on the private radio station, Radio M, which is chaired by Ihsan Al-Qadi.
The journalist holds dual citizenship. It was precisely this that enabled her to slip under the noses of the Algerian authorities and avoid deportation in Tunisia.
France's intervention was crucial in preventing Bouraoui from following in the footsteps of some of his colleagues who face lengthy prison sentences in Algeria due to the regime's serious legal action against the independent press.
Comments
Post a Comment