ALGIERS — Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who joined his country’s fight against French colonial rule in the 1950s, rose to foreign minister at 26, went into exile over corruption charges and then returned to help lead the nation out of civil war, has died, He was 84.
Algerian state television reported his death on Friday but provided no other details.
Mr. Bouteflika, who was forced out of the presidency in 2019, led Algeria for 20 years, longer than any of his predecessors.
He had a stroke in early 2013 and spent two and a half months in a French military hospital and many more months recuperating.
After the stroke, Mr. Bouteflika was rarely seen in public or on television, leaving the impression with many that the country was being governed by his inner circle, which was suspected in numerous corruption scandals.
Despite his health problems, he insisted on running for a fourth term in April 2014, a decision that divided the ruling elite, the military and the country’s intelligence apparatus. Algeria’s main opposition parties refused to take part in the election, and when Mr. Bouteflika was returned to power with an unlikely 81 percent of the vote, they refused to recognize the result.
He nevertheless remained in power, ruling by written directive and occasionally receiving foreign dignitaries.
Protests broke out in late February 2019, when it was announced that Mr. Bouteflika would run for a fifth term in elections scheduled for April 18. Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators protested peacefully in central Algiers on March 1, chanting “Bye, bye, Bouteflika” and “No fifth term!” amid news reports that he had left the country for medical tests in Geneva.
By April, the popular unrest had forced his resignation.
Mr. Bouteflika was born to Algerian parents on March 2, 1937, in Oujda, Morocco, then a French protectorate, where he grew up and went to school. (His Moroccan beginnings usually went unmentioned in his official Algerian biography.)
When he was 20 he joined the National Liberation Army in its insurgency against Algeria’s French colonial administration and served in the so-called Borders Army, which operated from Moroccan territory. He became a close assistant to the revolutionary leader Houari Boumediene.
After Algeria won independence in 1962, Mr. Bouteflika was appointed minister of youth and sports in the government of Ahmed Ben Bella, Algeria’s first elected president. He headed Algerian delegations to negotiations with the French in 1963 and was appointed foreign minister that year.
In 1965 he was an important actor in a bloodless coup led by Mr. Boumedienne that overthrew President Ben Bella. Mr. Bouteflika remained in charge of the foreign ministry until Mr. Boumediene’s death in December 1978. A talented and dashing foreign minister, he led a policy of anti-colonialism and noninterference and brought Algeria to prominence as a…
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