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| Said Bouteflika (centre), brother of Algeria's ex-president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, pictured in 2012 (AFP Photo/FAROUK BATICHE) |
Algiers (AFP) - Said Bouteflika, the powerful brother of deposed Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika, was arrested Saturday along with two former intelligence chiefs, a security source told AFP.
General
Mohamed Mediene, known as Toufik, who headed the secret service for 25 years
and former intelligence coordinator Athmane Tartag were the two spy chiefs
arrested, the source said, asking not to be named.
The
security source did not provide a reason for the arrests.
There was
no immediate comment from Algeria's police or army, despite efforts by AFP to
reach them.
Said
Bouteflika was seen as the guiding hand behind the rule of his ailing brother
Abdelaziz, who resigned on April 2 following pressure from the military in the
face of huge street protests.
The
president's brother was frequently cited in the past as a likely successor as
head of state.
He had
exerted increasing influence behind the scenes, as the former president was
rarely seen in public after a stroke in 2013.
Mediene
headed the all-powerful DRS intelligence agency, until Bouteflika fired him and
then dismantled the institution in 2016.
Algeria's
army chief Ahmed Gaid Salah has in recent weeks accused Mediene of being
involved in a plot against Algeria.
In
mid-April he gave what he called "a final warning" to the former DRS
chief whom he accused of conspiring to "hinder solutions to ending the
crisis" in the protest-hit country.
Salah had
helped Abdelaziz Bouteflika to neuter the DRS, which was long considered a
"state within a state".
Tartag --
described by Algerian media as close to the former president's brother -- was
fired just after Bouteflika's resignation.
Salah has
spoken of a meeting attended by "known individuals, the identity of whom
will be revealed at the right time, that sought to lead a virulent media
campaign across various media and on social networks against the army."
According
to Algerian media, this meeting was attended by Mediene, Tartag and Said
Bouteflika.
Mediene
said "I have never met, whether it be a single time, this person from the
security forces who was cited as taking part in this pseudo-meeting, since I left
my position" heading the DRS.
Algeria's
former defence minister Khaled Nezzar meanwhile has recently claimed that Said
Bouteflika wanted to declare a state of emergency and had considered firing
Salah, ahead of the president's resignation.
Demonstrations
are ongoing in the North African country, with people pouring onto the streets
for the 11th consecutive week on Friday, to demand the resignation of regime
insiders and the establishment of transitional institutions.

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