Unemployment is far more acute in cities, where the cost of living is high and there is no back-up in the form of a jobs guarantee programme which the government offers in rural areas
Algeria’s President Abdelmadjid Tebboune said on Sunday he was recovering from the Covid-19 illness, in his first televised appearance since he was hospitalised in Germany almost two months ago.
“Thanks to God... I have started on the road to recovery,” the 75-year-old said a day after the first anniversary of his election.
“It may take two or three weeks but, God willing, I will recover all my bodily strength.”
The video was broadcast on state television and published on Tebboune’s Twitter account.
He did not give his location, but his Twitter feed indicated that he was outside Algeria.
Tebboune, a heavy smoker, was hospitalised in Germany on October 28, and Algerian authorities later announced that he had the Covid-19 illness.
His absence had sparked concerns of an institutional crisis, weeks after voters approved a revised constitution on record low turnout in a referendum widely seen as a manoeuvre to neutralise the long-running Hirak protest movement.
Tebboune has been unable to sign the revised constitution into law because he must be on Algerian soil to do so.
He also has until December 31 to sign off on a 2021 budget.
But he said on Sunday he was following developments in Algeria “day by day, if not hour by hour”, and noted progress in cutting the country’s daily toll of Covid-19 infections.
Visibly thinner than before and wearing a casual jacket, he sat at a desk next to an Algerian flag.
Algeria has officially recorded more than 92,000 virus cases and almost 2,600 deaths.
Tebboune won last year’s widely boycotted December 12 presidential election, following months of mass protests that had swept his predecessor Abdelaziz Bouteflika from office.
Tebboune’s prolonged disappearance had reminded many Algerians of Bouteflika’s frequent hospitalisations abroad.
Last month’s constitutional referendum, timed to coincide with Algeria’s 1962 independence from France, had been seen as a bid to boost Tebboune’s legitimacy.
But with the president overseas and the Hirak urging a boycott, the vote saw even lower turnout than the election that brought Tebboune to power.
His absence came as Algeria faces a sharp recession due to the coronavirus pandemic and a gaping budget deficit due to low crude prices that have slashed the country’s vital oil revenues.
Tebboune has promised to fight for a “strong and diversified” economy and work to wean the country off oil.
Tebboune has also reached out to the “blessed” Hirak, which staged over a year of mass protests until it was forced to suspend them amid coronavirus restrictions earlier this year.
But his administration has overseen a crackdown on dissent.
Unemployment is far more acute in cities, where the cost of living is high and there is no back-up in the form of a jobs guarantee programme which the government offers in rural areas
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