Khalida Messaoudi - Algeria

interview with
Khalida Messaoudi
Women's rights activist - Algeria
by Richard Swift
New Internationalist magazine,
March 1995
'Ce n'est pas entre, c'est contre.' ('It's not between, it's against.') My rusty
French has failed me and Khalida Messaoudi leans forward to make
sure I don't miss a crucial distinction. Khalida, 36, is a former
mathematics teacher and she is accustomed to being both precise
and logical.
The social conflict currently raging in
Algeria is a war, she stresses, but not in the way that most people
think. 'This is not a fight between the military backed Front
de Liberation National (FLN) Government and Islamic fundamentalists.
It is more like a war against an unarmed civilian population by
a group intent on imposing its narrow vision on all Algerians.'
More than 80 people a day are being killed
by Islamic fundamentalists,' Khalida continues. They concentrate
on journalists, she says, because writers symbolize freedom of
expression, which the fundamentalists find intolerable. 'Intellectuals,
teachers, writers, thinkers - these are the people killed because
it is they who defend traditional notions of liberty. But sometimes
simple citizens are killed too, randomly, just for the purpose
of terror. One day ordinary people may decide to say "No"
to the fundamentalists' ambitions and they want to avoid that
happening. They kill women who oppose their views of how we should
behave. They cannot allow difference. That is why they insist
on veils to cover the difference. They are fascists who claim
Allah is on their side and that they are marching under the banner
of righteousness.'
As a founding member of the 'Independent
Association for the Triumph of Women's Rights', Ms Messaoudi is
one of Algeria's most outspoken and best known feminists. She
has also been an unstinting critic of the fundamentalist Front
for Islamic Salvation (FIS) and was a key organizer in a series
of 1992 demonstrations against the establishment of an Islamic
state. She got her start as an activist in 1981 when she helped
spearhead opposition to Algeria's restrictive Family Code. Her
passionate, determined intensity and a razor-sharp mind make her
a formidable foe. And as a feminist she is critical of both the
Government, whom she refers to simply as 'the power', and the
Islamic fundamentalists, whom she calls the ' integrationists
'.
According to Messaoudi they are simply
two sides of the same coin. 'People in the West do not understand,'
she says with barely-hidden frustration. 'The Islamic movement
is not an opposition to the Government; it is in fact the best
way for the one-party state to reconstitute itself. This is not
to say that the fundamentalists don't have a popular base. After
years of one-party rule people are desperate and many feel the
FIS will make a difference. But when you examine their program,
there is nothing new. They just want to be the new dictatorship.
If necessary they will compromise and absorb members of the FLN
Government into their ranks. But it will simply be the old one-party
state with a new face.
For Messaoudi the proof of this is obvious
in the pattern of daily assassinations in the streets of Algiers
and Oran. 'The FIS know very well where the leaders of the current
regime live; they know their houses; they know everything about
them but they will never kill any of them. They kill only democrats,
intellectuals and liberals who have no direct political power.
In some ways the FIS are doing more to save the regime than to
destroy it.'
But if the Government were willing to
cut a deal with the fundamentalists, why had it overturned the
election which the FIS won in 1992 and seized power? To those
outside Algeria, she explains, the reason may not be obvious,
but insiders know that there is a power struggle within the Algerian
Army itself. A republican faction which is absolutely opposed
to the FIS is challenging an old guard who are willing to make
a deal in, order to save themselves from the inevitable. The old
guard is now in control. This faction engineered the murder of
President Boudiaf, the leader installed by the republicans after
the coup.
The upshot? The risk of war between these
two factions of the Army is now a real possibility, she says -
propelling Algeria even closer to the abyss.
Khalida Messaoudi's outspokenness has
not come without a price. She now spends each day in her homeland
trying to avoid the assassin's bullet.
'How do I live?' She smiles impatiently
at the question. 'It's not a question of how I live but of how
I survive. When you are condemned to death your first objective
is to stay alive... not only physically but as a symbol. You must
be constantly on the move with no fixed points - no house, no
regular work. I have developed the habit of not having any habits.'
Heroes
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