Anissa El-Mansali and Malika Matoub Show Support for Tebboune Alongside a Criminal

Incredible but true. The Algerian regime spares no means to ensure the success of the September 7 vote. Success means achieving a higher turnout than the one in December 2019, which, despite fraud, stood at 39.88%.

By Hichem ABOUD

This is the lowest voter turnout since the country’s independence in 1962. It has remained a bitter pill for the organizers of the vote. They carry it like a burden. Also, the total boycott by the Kabylie region has not been forgotten. In the two most important departments of this region, Tizi-Ouzou and Bejaia, not a single polling station was opened, and not a single ballot was cast. A historic zero turnout. A real affront to the regime, which multiplied its tricks this year to break the Kabyle boycott.

Among other means to rally a large number of voters, Tebboune’s campaign leadership called upon women. Two political women and one non-political woman were recruited… The widow of the late President Houari Boumediene, Anissa Agnès El-Mansali, the sister of the famous Kabyle singer Matoub Lounes, who was assassinated on June 25, 1998, Malika Boukettouche, and a woman engaged in the world’s oldest profession and a criminal who committed several offenses, as she admits in the video (number 2) that we broadcast at the bottom of this article.

Anissa El-Mansali Tarnishes the Memory of Late President Houari Boumediene

Voter turnout is a real obsession for the shadow decision-makers. They resort to anything that can help influence the electorate for massive participation. Thus, Mrs. Anissa Agnès El-Mansali, the widow of the late President Houari Boumediene, was invited to participate in a rally organized in Paris in favor of candidate Abdelmadjid Tebboune.

Having never expressed any political position, Anissa Boumediene surprised everyone. She, who always harbored a visceral hostility towards those who succeeded her late husband at the helm of the Algerian state, found herself, by some unknown secret, one of the affiliates of presidential candidate Tebboune. Yet, not long ago, during a rally of the Iranian opposition in Paris, where she was invited, she confided, with an ironic tone, to an Algerian journalist, “Look at who is leading Algeria today, the same Algeria that was once headed by Boumediene!”

Anissa El-Mansali, from a bourgeois family in Algiers whose father owned half of the Diar El-Mahçoul district in the heights of Algiers, met Boumediene when she was a young lawyer defending her father’s case. Her father, a film producer and distributor, was affected by the nationalization policies decided by Houari Boumediene at the time. Although she did not succeed in her case, she managed to win the heart of the most powerful man in the country. She ended up marrying him in late 1973 after a long wait. However, her marriage did not last long, as Houari Boumediene passed away from an inexplicable illness in December 1978, four years later.

Widowed, she lived far from the political spotlight. She devoted herself to historical research and writing literary works, including a collection of poems dedicated to her late husband titled “The Day and the Night” (1980, Saint-Germain-des-Prés editions) and the translation of “Khansâ’: I, Poet and Woman of Arabia”. Having inherited no material goods, not even a car from her late husband, Anissa El-Mansali used to shop in Algiers like any ordinary person. It was during one of these outings in 1994 that she was attacked by a young delinquent as she left a bakery in downtown Algiers. He snatched her necklace, but passersby quickly caught him. Upon learning of the incident, President Zeroual invited her to his office and provided her with a car and driver. She lived on a widow’s pension, which saw a modest increase after the death of Chadli Bendjedid.

Respected by Algerians, Anissa El-Mansali shocked everyone when she appeared last weekend supporting Tebboune’s candidacy.

The Incredible Betrayal of Matoub Lounes’ Sister, the Rebel

Another appearance that outraged all of Kabylie, and especially the die-hard fans of the champion of freedom and democracy, Matoub Lounes, known as “The Rebel,” was that of his sister Malika welcoming Tebboune’s campaign coordinator in Tizi-Ouzou. She received him at the headquarters of the foundation bearing her brother’s name, with the walls adorned with giant portraits of Tebboune.

Yet, Malika was said to be cut from the same cloth as her brother. She was seen as the rightful heir of the rebel who refused any compromise with the current regime and any concessions when it came to freedom and democracy. But here she is now, Malika Matoub, supporting the man who set Kabylie on fire for three consecutive years, imprisoned over 500 innocent people, and sentenced 48 young Kabyles to death without any reason. They were accused of murdering the young Djamel Bensmaïl, whose killing by security services has been proven with documentary evidence.

Chitana Mkalcha Supports Tebboune

She roams the streets of Algiers in a luxurious vehicle covered with posters of the presidential candidate Abdelmadjid Tebboune. She is known by the nickname Chitana Mkalcha (the spoiled devil). When you discover her profile, there is cause for concern about the president’s entourage.

In a video (No. 1), she declares herself a fan of Tebboune, saying, “I’m ready to die for Tebboune.” She explains her commitment to his side “because he has served the country.”

Listening to her speak, she seems nothing like a politician. “But she is far better than Bengrina, the clown who marked the electoral campaign with his burlesque appearances. At least, she doesn’t act like a clown. Sure, she’s a girl who works the streets of Algiers and knows nothing about politics. But at least she doesn’t make a fool of herself like Bengrina,” commented an observer.

– “She works the streets?”

– “Yes,” replied our source. “She is a well-known prostitute in Algiers,” he explained. The proof, he provides us with this video (No. 2), where Chitana Mkalcha confesses that not only is she a prostitute but also a delinquent. She used to attack clients she met in nightclubs and empty their wallets. “They are in the dozens,” she boasts.

A surprising recruitment by Tebboune’s electoral campaign leadership, headed by Interior Minister Brahim Merad. “They couldn’t find anyone else to campaign for Tebboune other than a prostitute with gangster-like behavior. Those who have called the Algerian regime a gangster regime weren’t wrong,” concluded our observer, who knows the ins and outs of Algerian power well.

 

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