Résolution du Parlement Européen     "Libérez les journalistes!"     L'Union Européenne presse Alger     Le Parlement Européen condamne     Le Parlement Européen réclame la libération     Rsf se voit systématiquement refuser le visa     Le Parlement européen saisit les autorités algériennes     Message de Mohamed Benchicou     Le délit de dire     Quand une victime devient coupable     Se taire ou disparaître     Rassemblement à la Maison de la Presse     Parce qu'ils ont l'Algérie au coeur     L'avocat de Benchicou répond à Belkhadem     La chronique d'Élisabeth Dath     Vaste mouvement de solidarité en France     Mobilisation pour Mohamed Benchicou     Des sit-in de la Fij devants des ambassades algériennes     Relaxer les journalistes algériens     Appel de l'Humanité     La Fij dénonce     Indignation     Malade, Benchicou restera en Prison     Benchicou est maintenu en prison     Le mur du silence se lézarde     La presse "uniformément correcte"     Journalists behind bars?     Des journalistes derrière les barreaux?     Harcèlement à l'égard de la presse indépendante     Liberté pour les journalistes     Regain de mobilisation     Déclaration     Liberté de la presse     Algérie, morne presse     Harcèlement systématique     Journalistes de tous pays, unissez-vous!     "Benchicou doit être libéré"     Mise au point de Mme Benchicou     Le pluralisme de façade     Les journalistes français solidaires     Escalada de represión     Rsf demande un terme au cauchemar judiciaire     "Benchicou ne mérite pas l'emprisonnement"     Le Matin, Benchicou et Hugo Chavez     "Benchicou paye pour ses écrits"     La normalisation de la société     La presse étroitement surveillée     Fait inédit     La justice algérienne confirme la peine de prison     "On est tous des Benchicou!"     Stifling press freedom     Fine annunciata de un giornale troppo scomodo     Confirmation en appel de la peine de 2 ans de prison     Rsf dénonce une justice inique     Le Matin est suspendu     Déclaration du Comité pour la libération des journalistes     Pitizioni per I giornalisti incarcerati     Le président Bouteflika ferme le jeu     Les sénateurs américains interpellés     Des témoins pour Benchicou     La Fidh s'inquiète des atteintes répétées à la liberté de la presse     Lettre ouverte au président Bouteflika     La tromperie nationale     "La situation de la liberté de la presse, dans ces pays, est lamentable"     Bradage du siège du journal Le Matin     For international plan of action     Une délégation des médias demande un plan international d'action     Concern over "media crisis" in Algeria     "Il y a danger sur les libertés"     Nouvelle agression contre la presse indépendante en Algérie     Algerian press decries journalist's jailing     Suite aux emprisonnements et aux menaces contre la presse     Mme Benchicou saisit le Parlement européen     Paris et la Commission interpellés     "Je n'ai commis aucune infraction"     Pour la libération immédiate de Hafnaoui et Benchicou     Dois anos de prisao para jornalista argelino     Pétition pour la libération de Mohamed Benchicou     Pétition:"Liberez Benchicou!"     Algérie, un pays qui résiste     Cpj calls on authorities to cease campaign of judicial harassment     Omar Belhouchet:"Au suivant!"     Benchicou sentenced to two years in prison     Mohamed Benchicou condamné à 2 ans de prison     Algérie, rapport 2004     "Bouteflika, une imposture algérienne"     In der loyalitätsfalle     "Le Matin ne se laissera pas faire"     Le communiqué du Matin     Bouteflika no puede prohibir un libro     Le livre de Mohamed Benchicou     Les éditeurs de journaux se réunissent     Sas condenado a 6 meses de prisión incondecional     Solidarity with algerian media     Solidarité internationale avec les médias algériens     Rsf denuncia el acoso a que está sometida la prensa     Nuevas detenciones de periodistas en Argelia     Le Matin newspaper harassed by police     Benchicou talks about attitudes to press freedom     Benchicou revient sur les 10 années d'existence d'une presse ébranlée par la guerre

  


 

 

11october 2001

Mohamed Benchicou is one of the highest profiles in the Algerian press. At 49 is managing editor of French-language daily, Le Matin, which he helped found in 1991. He has worked for the country's official news agency, APS, the now defunct news weekly, Algérie-Actualité and the staunchly pro-regime El Moudjahid, which he quit in 1989 to revive a paper called, Alger Républicain.

That was two years before the reformist government of prime minister Hamrouch passed a law easing restrictions on independent, privately-owned publications.
The unflinchingly anti-Islamist Le Matin prints four regional editions – east, west, centre and Kabylia – boasts a total circulation of 140,000.

It is one of Algeria's most widely read dailies and last year recorded a profit of DZD4 million ($52,000) for total sales of over DZD400 million. Its financial strength ensures it independence that Mohamed Benchicou uses to voice his beliefs.

Interface: Le Matin is 10 years old and so is the civil war. Would you like to draw a parallel?
Yes, there's a natural kind of parallel. We came into being when Algeria was discovering freedom and democracy and their price. All sorts of problems and conflict raised their heads. We were there to observe and report on the tragic events that then unfolded. Our experience of these last 10 years has been that of the press in its entirety. Most papers are 10 years old, as is Algerian democracy, if you can call the decade which followed the abolition of the single party democracy.

If Le Matin didn't exist, would you create it today in the current situation?
No. The need to express oneself or one's political convictions are not enough. You need to really want to found a newspaper. I no longer have that desire… Le Matin is not governed by political considerations, let that be clear. At the time [1991] there was a special situation and a sense of frustration. We had all been in the MJA (Algerian Journalists' Movement, independent journalists' union founded in 1988) and we'd made pledges that we had to fulfil


Has having an independent press helped Algeria develop or has it enshrined the conflicts that riddle the country?
When I hear that the press has fanned the flames of Islamism and events in Kabylia I don't really understand… The press doesn't create events, it reports on them and it can only survive in a transparent society. The grievance against us is not that we informed, but that we failed to conceal. Algeria's press was one step ahead of society on the road to democracy and the free press is politically more advanced than the country's political organisations… None of Algeria's politicians talk to the media… they still belong to the single party culture… it's not out of political caution, but because they are congenitally backward… Take official attitudes towards terrorism here and abroad. President Bouteflika offers his condolences to Switzerland for the shooting at a local parliament and ignores the massacres going on here. Even if we had five television channels they'd all show nothing but cartoons. The printed press is just as backward. The one thing that most press bosses have in common is that they want to become information minister.

Violence against journalists has stopped. Do you think it could resume?
There's no doubt it could. Have all the contradictions in Algerian society been resolved? No. So all what's already happened can happen again. By the same token, the regime has more or less stopped imprisoning journalists… but if interest are at stake it'll start again tomorrow. There is still no mutual acceptance and no common project for society.

Who do you think was behind the murders of journalists?
I don't think there's a shadow of doublt over who the murders were. I might be the most naive of all Algerians, but for me political assassinations are typical of Islamists against what they consider stooges of the regime.

Five Algerian journalists are still missing. Why do so many papers like Le Matin still refuse to talk about it?
The five journalists have sparked a campaign whose aim is not to elucidate the mystery but to embarrass the regime… I've got no reason to feel guilty over not talking about these missing journalists. Fahassi [one of the missing journalists] did his stint in the training camps in southern Algeria, just like any other FIS activist. Just because he's a journalist why should he be spared the same fate as other Islamists?… Le Matin covers the issue of the missing people issue as it sees fit and we don't want anybody giving us lessons. I have more in common with the families of the missing who demonstrate here in Algiers than with demonstrators in Paris where they orchestrate campaigns to undermine the secular regime. I don't have any scores to settle with the regime apart from its moves to bring the FIS back into politics. I don't believe the military are the only ones responsible for stopping the electoral process in 1992. I was part of it, like many others. We're all responsible, and I face up to my responsibilities.

You've clearly come out in favour of Algeria's generals over 1992. Don't you think it would help make them more credible if those who got rich illegally or by using their power were brought to justice?
If a single general was charged with corruption, I'd be the first to write about it… If cases come to light with evidence to prove the charges, we journalists will do our work. But the problem is that generals have not pulled out of politics, they've clung on to power and they're out of kilter in a society that has passed them by. Instead of letting society express itself, they've kept their monopoly over power. And they've allowed Islamism to flourish… But the main grievance against the generals is not corruption but that they cancelled the elections in January 1992… This fixation on the generals is designed to get Bouteflika and the generals to turn back the clock to just before January 1992.

Reading Le Matin, one sometimes almost gets the impression that you're for an allied intervention in Algeria to wipe out terrorism once and for all.
You can't wipe out terrorism by sending US troops into Algeria because Algerian terrorism is just a link in an international network. It would naive to believe that eliminating Zouabri or Hattab would eliminate terrorism. There's a worldwide strategy. See how fast the GIA find men and arms. We haven't given enough though to what Bush meant when he said the war would be longs. Spot interventions won't solve anything. We've got to realise it's on a world scale and it's a world fight.

Still communist and anti-American?
It's a mindset that was a key component in our development and outlook and there's no way we're going to deny where we are coming from.

COPYRIGHT ©Algeria Interface.