E/CN.4/2003/66/Add.1
page 8
legislative elections of May and October 2002, intended to see to it that the rule of law became
established in a democratic process which would strengthen the multiparty system. The Minister
of Justice also stressed that human rights were an asset and heritage that Algeria should embrace.
28.
Under the heading “Broad areas of reform”, the Government programme approved by the
National People’s Assembly on 27 July 2002 calls for a legislative programme based on a clearer
delineation and better protection of fundamental rights and liberties, and on the amendment of
laws and regulations to bring them into accord with international standards and treaty
undertakings. The head of Government has said that he is determined to put through reforms so
as to institute and entrench democracy and the rule of law and develop human rights beyond the
reach of extremism and violence.
29.
By letter dated 1 April 2002, President Bouteflika asked the National Advisory
Committee on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights to draw up a real plan of action on
human rights, drawing both on agreements that Algeria had ratified and on the recommendations
of United Nations human rights bodies. The lustre that the President added to a colloquium on
St. Augustine is of a piece with his concern to remind people, first, of the need for tolerance, and
second, of Algeria’s richness and diversity.
5. The religious situation in Algeria
30.
Ninety-nine per cent of the Algerian population are Sunni Muslim adherents of the
Maliki school of law. The Maliki school, which predominates in the Maghreb, is a fairly
hard-line one drawing on the tradition inherited from Medina at the time of the Prophet; it
recommends taking account of the general interest and sets great store by tradition.
31.
There is in the Mzab region of Algeria an Ibadite community 150,000 to 200,000 strong.
The Ibadites, descendants of the Kharidjites and doctrinally uncompromising Islamic purists,
founded Ghardaïa and four other towns which are still home to their community.
32.
In the absence of official statistics on religious minorities one has to rely on figures
supplied by the communities concerned. These suggest that Algeria has 10,000 Catholics and
between 5,000 and 20,000 Protestants. One Adventist church is said to have a congregation of
about 20.
33.
Before independence there was a Jewish community some 150,000 strong, but most have
left the country. According to the Ministry of the Interior’s Director of Public Liberties, there
may be around 1,000 Jews living in Algiers, Blida and Constantine, but all those interviewed felt
that there was no longer a real Jewish community and no working synagogue.
34.
elite.
Atheism appears to be marginal, although it is found among a certain fringe of the lay