PARIS — Ultranationalist social media influencers from Algeria are spreading
hate across France — the country that used to rule it.
The trend has triggered a wave of nervousness in government in Paris, with
several high-profile arrests over the past few weeks. A handful of online
influencers have built a large audience, incited violence and terrorist
activity, and, in some cases, targeted French-based opponents of the Algerian
regime.
The influencers are “profiteering from a context of heightened tensions between
France and Algeria” French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau told weekly
newspaper L’Express.
Relations between France and its former colony have been fraught for decades,
poisoned by resentment over the 132-year bloody rule, violence committed during
Algeria’s war of independence that ended in 1962, and, more recently, deadlock
on migration issues.
They took a nosedive after President Emmanuel Macron over the summer sided with
Algeria’s regional rival Morocco in a long-running feud about Western Sahara,
giving a nod to Morocco’s autonomy plan for the disputed territory.
At least seven people have been arrested since early January for their online
posts, where they are accused of inciting violence against individuals and, in
some cases, calling for terrorist attacks against France.
In one of the most high-profile cases, an Algerian living in the western city of
Brest who goes by the name of zazouyoucef, is accused of glorifying terrorism
after posting several inflammatory video clips on TikTok, where his account had
400,000 followers. At least one of the clips mentions by name Algerian President
Abdelmadjid Tebboune and seemingly threatens his opponents.
“Among these influencers, there are lone wolves, crazy people who have no link
[with the Algerian regime] but who acted against the backdrop of preexisting
rhetoric,” said Chawki Benzehra, a France-based online Algerian activist and
opponent to the regime who has played an active role in flagging violent posts
on his social media accounts. None of posts has resulted in an actual act of
violence that has been documented or been linked to a credible terrorist threat.
> 🚨Un algérien 🇩🇿 habitant à Brest appelle à commettre des attentas en France
> 🇫🇷 le 1er janvier contre toute personne qui manifesterait à Paris contre le
> régime Algérien❗️Malgré les signalements, les autorités françaises
> (@BrunoRetailleau) n’ont procédé à aucune arrestation et cet…
> pic.twitter.com/AxwBsj8Y6L
>
> — Chawki Benzehra شوقي بن زهرة (@ChawkiBenzehra) December 31, 2024
PULLING THE STRINGS
A number of pro-regime, nationalist Algerian influencers have emerged over the
past couple of years, but things took a turn after France’s Western Sahara move,
Benzehra said. “It was like an orchestrated wave … Toward the end of last year,
people started to flag video clips that were way over the line.”
The French government has refrained from accusing the Algerian government of
pulling the strings.
“At this stage we have no evidence that this is a coordinated campaign,”
Retailleau said.
“We haven’t seen artificial amplification or coordination,” a French security
official who was granted anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter, said.
“Generally speaking, the Algerian ecosystem isn’t really structured or
experienced [when it comes to online influence],” he added.
The very high number of followers for several of these accounts has caught the
eye of officials and academics. One of the online activists arrested last week,
dubbed Mahdi B. had more than 800,000 followers on TikTok. He was sentenced to
prison for glorifying terrorism, local media reported.
“I have been surprised by the number of followers,” said Benjamin Stora, a
prominent historian who was commissioned in 2020 by Macron to work on the issue
of French colonization. | Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images
“I have been surprised by the number of followers,” said Benjamin Stora, a
prominent historian who was commissioned in 2020 by Macron to work on the issue
of French colonization and ways to mend wounds left open after the country’s war
of independence. “[Their message] is not very elaborate … But here is one idea
which is nationalism,” he added. “The nationalist craze in [part of] the
Algerian diaspora is new.”
‘WIDE ECHO IN FRANCE’
France is home to a diaspora of more than 2 million Algerian immigrants and
descendants of immigrants, according to French national statistics institute
Insee.
Most of the accused influencers, whose accounts have now been deleted by social
media platforms, are publishing in Algerian Arabic, and their audience is both
inside and outside of France.
“The accounts who have the biggest following have an Arabic-speaking audience
spreading over multiple countries,” a government adviser with knowledge of the
investigations said. But they have “a wide echo in France,” he said.
The two countries are also at loggerheads over the fate of Boualem Sansal, a
75-year-old French-Algerian writer and outspoken critic of the Algerian regime,
who was detained after stepping off a plane in Algiers in November, with Macron
accusing Algeria of “dishonoring itself.” The European Parliament on Thursday
approved a resolution calling for Sansal’s immediate release, calling it a human
rights violation.
The two countries are also at loggerheads over the fate of Boualem Sansal, a
75-year-old French-Algerian writer and outspoken critic of the Algerian regime.
| François Guillot/AFP via Getty Images
Macron’s Western Sahara move came after unsuccessful efforts by the French
president to try to mend the relationship. It was interpreted by some as a
pragmatic move by Macron, presumably to strengthen its relationship with one of
the few remaining allies it has in the region, at the expense of Algeria. A lot
of France’s historical allies in the Sahel — many of which are former colonies —
turned hostile.
The Western Sahara move and Macron’s open support to Sansal infuriated the
Algerian regime, which some are now suspecting of fueling the online campaign
powered by members of the Algerian diaspora, either directly or by proxy.
Algerian state-controlled media has a long history of attacking France, fueling
the fire of resentment and anger against Paris among part of the Algerian
population at home and the Algerian community abroad. After Sansal’s arrest and
reports about Macron’s first criticism, Algeria’s state-owned press agency
lashed out at France’s political class and accused it of infringing on Algerian
sovereignty.
“The Algerian regime is extremely fragile and the more fragile it is, the more
it hits France,” said a French diplomatic official who, like others in this
story, was granted anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter. “The French position
on Western Sahara is seen as a stab in the back.”
Tag - By the numbers
The U.K. economy slowed to a crawl in the third quarter, despite tentative signs
of a pick-up in confidence amid a change of government and a turn in the
interest rate cycle.
Gross domestic product grew by only 0.1 percent between July and September, the
Office for National Statistics said on Friday. That was after two surprisingly
strong quarters in the first half of the year, in which it had grown 0.7 and 0.5
percent, respectively.
GDP was up 1.0 percent from a year earlier, but the ONS indicated this was
entirely due to the net increase in population. In per capita terms, a better
reflection of living standards, GDP fell 0.1 percent on the quarter and was flat
on the year.
The pound was unimpressed by the numbers, and was flat in early trading against
the dollar and euro.
The numbers underline the challenge facing the new Labour government as it
grapples with the after-effects of Covid and Brexit, along with longer-term
problems such as population ageing and the growing but still incalculable risks
of a fragmenting global trade system.
In a speech at the Mansion House on Thursday, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel
Reeves had said she will “always do what is in our national interest for our
economy,” adding “that means free and open trade, especially with our most
economically important partners … that includes the U.S., our single most
important destination for financial services trade.”