Algeria’s ailing 82-year-old leader Abdelaziz Bouteflika has given up his presidential seat, amid announcement of his intentions earlier this year to run for a fifth term in Algerian presidential election– according to a statement published on Tuesday by the state-run Algeria Press Agency.
“President of the Republic Abdelaziz Bouteflika has officially notified president of the Constitutional Council of his decision to end his term as President of the Republic,” said APS.
The prospect, where Bouteflika cited his vision for next term, sparked mass protests in Algeria, eventually forcing Bouteflika to back down and withdraw his candidacy. The government has since postponed the elections.
Bouteflika was first elected in 1999 with the backing of the military, in a race boycotted by all other candidates and widely panned as fraudulent. However, he won praise as a new president for steering his country back to stability after “the black decade” of the 1990s, when a bloody civil war left more than 150,000 dead, CNN wrote.
He then was elected again in 2004, 2009 and 2014 by wide margins, although often with criticism about the elections’ fairness.
After decades in power, the octogenarian’s health issues have recently raised concerns over his abilities for leading the country, as well as the controversies who might have actually been making decisions in the President’s office. Bouteflika has rarely been seen in public since suffering a stroke in 2013.
Bouteflika’s resignation announcement comes after an earlier communiqué from the President’s office that said Bouteflika would step down before his term ended on April 28. It promised he would “take important measures to ensure the continuity of the functioning of the State institutions during the period of transition,” CNN quoted.
It also comes one week after the country’s army chief called for Bouteflika to resign.
Follow TKG on Twitter & Facebook

