Latest news with #Algerians


Daily Tribune
a day ago
- Sport
- Daily Tribune
Bahrain's Road to Recovery gets Tougher
TDT | Manama Bahrain take on defending champions Egypt tonight in a crucial fourth-round clash Bahrain are set to face Egypt at 8pm tonight in a key fixture of the 26th Arab Men's Basketball Championship. After back-to-back losses against the UAE and Tunisia, the hosts will be aiming to regroup against the unbeaten and unbothered Egyptians. Egypt have yet to lose, having posted big wins over Qatar and Kuwait. They have rotated effectively through their deep roster, with Mazen Mohamed, Ahmed Moheb, and Ebrahim Amin all contributing consistently at both ends of the floor. Bahrain, meanwhile, will again rely on JaKarr Sampson and Mustafa Hussain, who have carried the scoring load so far. Sampson is averaging over 25 points per game, while Hussain has emerged as the team's top perimeter threat. Tonight's matchup will likely hinge on Bahrain's ability to manage Egypt's pace and limit their second-chance scoring. Any result other than a win would deal a major blow to the hosts' title hopes, with just two games remaining after this round. Algeria Seek Fourth Win Algeria take on Qatar in the opening match of the day at 4pm. The Algerians are unbeaten so far and are among the frontrunners to contend for the gold medal. They come into the game off a convincing 99-61 win over the UAE, following an earlier win against Tunisia. Qatar, on the other hand, remain winless in the tournament. While Dejan Janik has led their scoring efforts, the team has struggled defensively and allowed opponents to take early control in all their losses. Midtable Battle in the Balance Tunisia face the UAE in a potentially pivotal meeting at 6pm between two teams on two wins and one loss. Tunisia have rebounded from an opening-day defeat to Algeria with consecutive wins over Kuwait and Bahrain. Jawhar Jawadi and Omar Abada have been instrumental, particularly from long range, while the team's frontcourt has improved steadily through the tournament. The UAE are coming off their first loss — a heavy 38-point defeat to Algeria — and will be looking to re-establish form. Demarco Dickerson has been their most consistent performer, while Qais Al Shabibi and Khalifa Khalil have also had strong moments. A win for either team tonight would keep them in close range of the tournament leaders heading into the final stretch.


Morocco World
7 days ago
- Politics
- Morocco World
France to Tighten Travel Conditions for Algerian Dignitaries
Rabat — French Interior Minister Bruno Retaileau is tightening travel conditions to France for a group of Algerian dignitaries, government spokesperson Sophie Primas said today. AFP quoted the French official saying that the decision comes after Algeria refused to take back 120 nationals who are under an obligation to leave French territory, or QQTF. 'The data we have shows that 20 individuals under QQTF, who have valid documents for returning to Algeria, have not been taken back by the Algerian authorities,' she said after a meeting of the council of ministers. Between March and July 22, dozens of Algerians were sent back to France, according to Le Figaro. 'You may have noticed that the Interior Minister has become increasingly inclined to take stricter measures, particularly regarding Algerian diplomacy,' Primas said, stressing that travel conditions to France will be more difficult for several Algerian dignitaries. She recalled that France is witnessing a power struggle with Algeria, which includes the unanswered demand urging the Algerian regime to release French-Algerian author Boualem Sansal and journalist Christophe Gleizes. Beyond the complex Algeria-France ties, the two countries endured dramatic tensions due to several factors, including Paris' newfound position in support of Morocco's territorial integrity and sovereignty over its southern provinces in Western Sahara. In July of last year, France officially recognized Morocco's sovereignty over its southern provinces in the Western Sahara with a letter from President Emmanuel Macron to King Mohammed VI. France's decision was followed by Macron's State visit in October, during which he reiterated the decision in the Moroccan parliament, emphasizing that France's stance was not meant to antagonize any country. Macron's remarks were a direct response to Algeria's ongoing efforts to undermine Morocco's territorial integrity as well as France's support, as the Algerian regime has long backed the Polisario Front and its destabilizing actions against Morocco. The tensions were exacerbated by Algeria's reluctance to receive back nationals subject to deportation orders. Another point of contention is the imprisonment of Sansal, who received a sentence of five years in prison on charges of undermining state security. 'Can a great nation honor itself by keeping someone who is sick and elderly in detention for wrong reasons?' Retailleau said earlier this year.


Express Tribune
21-07-2025
- Health
- Express Tribune
Remembering Algeria's Frantz Fanon 100 years after his birth
Frantz Fanon is regarded as a crucial figure of early anti-colonial and anti-racist theory. For Algerians, he is one of the heroes of the country's struggle for independence. Yet his role during the war against France and his writings remain largely unknown to a wider public, reports DW. July 20, 2025, marked the 100th anniversary of his birth. Fanon was not granted a long life: At just 36, he died of leukemia in 1961 without ever witnessing Algerian independence, a goal he devoted his life to. His work is "a reflection on the concept of solidarity, understanding what solidarity means in a moment of war, of resistance," Mireille Fanon Mendès France told DW. She is Fanon's eldest daughter and co-chair of the international Frantz Fanon Foundation. She says she barely knew her father and retains few childhood memories of him, but as a teenager, she immersed herself in her father's literary work. Fanon's writings made it clear that the struggle for Algerian independence not only benefited Algeria, but was also about African unity. "And this African unity is still not there," his daughter explains. In her Paris apartment, Alice Cherki goes through old documents from her youth during Algeria's war of independence against France: "I knew then that it was colonialism," she recalls. Now 89, she knew Frantz Fanon well. She worked alongside him in the 1950s as an intern at the psychiatric clinic in Blida, Algeria. Fanon was the head of the psychiatric department and not only cared for the sick but also helped Algerian nationalists. "We took in the wounded, the fighters who came here," Cherki said. Fanon set up a supposed day clinic within the hospital, only for show. In reality, he secretly took in the wounded and those who needed to recover, Cherki told DW. Committed to the cause Born in the French colony of Martinique, Fanon grew up in a French colonial society and was deeply influenced by his experiences: He volunteered for World War Two for France at the age of 17. As a Black man though, he experienced daily racism in the French army. After the war, he studied medicine and philosophy in France and later moved with his wife Josie to Blida in French-Algeria, where he became chief physician of the psychiatric clinic. From the beginning of the war in 1954, Fanon was helping Algerian nationalists while continuing to work as a psychiatrist. He established contacts with several officers of the National Liberation Army as well as with the political leadership of the National Liberation Front (FLN), especially its influential members Abane Ramdane and Benyoucef Benkhedda. From 1956 on, he was fully committed to the "Algerian cause." Fanon wrote some of the most influential texts of the anti-colonial movement, like his early work Black Skin, White Masks about the psychological effects of racism and colonialism on Black people. His most important book though was The Wretched of the Earth where he focuses on revolutionary action and national liberation. The book was published with a foreword by Jean-Paul Sartre shortly before his death in 1961. On July 5, 1962, Algeria gained independence after an eight-year armed struggle against the then-colonial power, France. Historians estimate the number of Algerian deaths at 500,000; according to the French Ministry of the Armed Forces, approximately 25,000 soldiers lost their lives. Anissa Boumediene is a writer, lawyer, and former First Lady of Algeria. She was the wife of President Houari Boumediene, who ruled the country from 1965 to 1978. "Frantz Fanon is part of Algerian history. He defended independence. He was truly an infinitely respectable person," she told DW. Two new films - Fanon by Jean-Claude Barny, released in April 2025, and Frantz Fanon by Algerian director Abdenour Zahzah, released in 2024 - are intended to keep his memory and his anti-colonial theories alive.


DW
20-07-2025
- Health
- DW
Frantz Fanon: Algeria's independence hero 100 years on – DW – 07/20/2025
Frantz Fanon was one of the major anti-colonial thinkers of the 20th century and a hero of the Algerian liberation movement. He died just before Algeria's independence from France. Fanon would have turned 100 on July 20. Fanon is regarded as a crucial figure of early anti-colonial and anti-racist theory. For Algerians, he is one of the heroes of the country's struggle for independence. Yet his role during the war against France and his writings remain largely unknown to a wider public. July 20, 2025, marks the 100th anniversary of his birth. Fanon was not granted a long life: At just 36, he died of leukemia in 1961 without ever witnessing Algerianindependence, a goal he devoted his life to. His work is "a reflection on the concept of solidarity, understanding what solidarity means in a moment of war, of resistance," Mireille Fanon Mendès France told DW. She is Fanon's eldest daughter and co-chair of the international Frantz Fanon Foundation. She says she barely knew her father and retains few childhood memories of him, but as a teenager, she immersed herself in her father's literary work. Fanon's writings made it clear that the struggle for Algerian independence not only benefited Algeria, but was also about African unity. "And this African unity is still not there," his daughter explains. In her Paris apartment, Alice Cherki goes through old documents from her youth during Algeria's war of independence against France: "I knew then that it was colonialism," she recalls. Now 89, she knew Frantz Fanon well. She worked alongside him in the 1950s as an intern at the psychiatric clinic in Blida, Algeria. Frantz Fanon was the head of the psychiatric department and not only cared for the sick but also helped Algerian nationalists. "We took in the wounded, the fighters who came here," Cherki said. Fanon set up a supposed day clinic within the hospital, only for show. In reality, he secretly took in the wounded and those who needed to recover, Cherki told DW. Born in the French colony of Martinique, Fanon grew up in a French colonial society and was deeply influenced by his experiences: He volunteered for World War Two for France at the age of 17. As a Black man though, he experienced daily racism in the French army. After the war, he studied medicine and philosophy in France and later moved with his wife Josie to Blida in French-Algeria, where he became chief physician of the psychiatric clinic. From the beginning of the war in 1954, Frantz Fanon was helping Algerian nationalists while continuing to work as a psychiatrist. He established contacts with several officers of the National Liberation Army as well as with the political leadership of the National Liberation Front (FLN), especially its influential members Abane Ramdane and Benyoucef Benkhedda. From 1956 on, he was fully committed to the "Algerian cause." Amzat Boukari Yabara is a historian and author of the 2014 book "Africa Unite," which traces the history of Pan-Africanism. He emphasizes the significance of Fanon's resignation from his position as a doctor in the fall of 1956. "By this time, he had already made contact with several FLN members and would later go to Tunis, where an FLN branch was established," explains Yabara. "From Tunis, he participated in the struggle by writing for the FLN newspaper El Moudjahid under a pseudonym. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, he became ambassador of the provisional government of the Algerian Republic – the government-in-exile of the FLN – in Accra, a traveling ambassador for sub-Saharan Africa." Frantz Fanon wrote some of the most influential texts of the anti-colonial movement, like his early work "Black skin, white masks" about the psychological effects of racismand colonialism on Black people. His most important book though was "The Wretched of the Earth" where he focuses on revolutionary action and national liberation. The book was published with a foreword by Jean-Paul Sartre shortly before his death in 1961. On July 5, 1962, Algeria gained independence after an eight-year armed struggle against the then-colonial power, France. Historians estimate the number of Algerian deaths at 500,000; according to the French Ministry of the Armed Forces, approximately 25,000 soldiers lost their lives. Anissa Boumediene is a writer, lawyer, and former First Lady of Algeria. She was the wife of President Houari Boumediene, who ruled the country from 1965 to 1978. "Frantz Fanon is part of Algerian history. He defended independence. He was truly an infinitely respectable person," she told DW. But even in Algeria, 64 years after his death, his memory should not be taken for granted, says journalist Lazhari Labter, who translated Fanon's writings into Algerian Arabic. "Today's generations have become increasingly ignorant of the history of their country, and especially of this subject," he explains. "And of course, apart from very small circles, apart from universities and intellectuals, the name Fanon doesn't mean much to younger generations. This may be because his works are not taught in schools, high schools, or universities." Two new films – "Fanon" by Jean-Claude Barny, released in April 2025, and "Frantz Fanon" by Algerian director Abdenour Zahzah, released in 2024 – are intended to keep his memory and his anti-colonial theories alive.


Ya Biladi
19-07-2025
- Politics
- Ya Biladi
Sahara : Tebboune accuses Morocco's backers of «imperialist» agenda
Last night, Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune sat down for an interview with local media, seizing the moment to criticize nations backing Morocco's position on the Sahara, dismissing them as «imperialists». «I will not abandon the Sahrawis to appease some and become an imperialist myself. Beyond our stance, the rest is a matter of imperialism. What do I stand to lose by continuing to support Western Sahara?» he questioned. «Today, Western Sahara is recognized by half of the African Union members (in reality, less than a third, editor's note). There are 55 states that recognize the Sahrawi Republic (actually, only about half as many, editor's note)», the president claimed. «We have learned to resist. Our principles remain unchanged». The head of state defended Algeria's support for the Polisario Front, rejecting the notion that this stance has only brought «hostility» towards Algeria. Tebboune insisted that «there are no more pragmatic people than Algerians». He pointed to «the strong relations Algeria maintains with the United States, Russia, and China. Non-alignment is in our blood». However, the president avoided discussing the ongoing tensions with the European Union.