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Algerian protesters chant as they take part in an anti-government demonstration in the capital Algiers, on January 31, 2020.AFP

'We Won't Stop': Despite Leader's Resignation, Algerians Keep Up Protest One Year On

Long-standing ruler Bouteflika resigned in April and the new president has offered concessions and talks to the opposition, but protesters still fill the squares

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Thousands of Algerians marched on Friday, a year since the start of weekly protests calling for a complete overhaul of the ruling elite, an end to corruption and the army's withdrawal from politics.

"We will not stop," chanted a crowd in the centre of the capital Algiers, despite a large police presence.

Over the past year the protesters have changed the face of Algeria's power structure, causing the fall of a veteran president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, and the arrest of dozens of leading figures including a once untouchable former intelligence chief.

However, while the new president has released people detained in the protests, set up a commission to amend the constitution and offered talks to the opposition, much of the old ruling elite remains in place.

The leaderless protest movement, known as "hirak", is demanding more concessions, including the release of more activists and the departure of more senior figures from positions of power.

"Our hirak is tireless. We are ready to keep marching for months more," said Yazid Chabi, a 23-year-old student on the central Didouche Mourad street in central Algiers.

However, since December's presidential election the number of protesters has fallen according to people attending the marches each week.

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Algeria's Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad addresses the National Assembly in the capital Algiers on February 11, 2020.AFP

Hirak opposed the election, regarding as illegitimate any vote that took place while the old ruling elite was in power and while the military was involved in politics.

Abdelmadjid Tebboune, a former president seen by the protesters as part of the old elite, was elected, but turnout was only 40 per cent according to official statistics.

Even without the political unrest, his new government now faces a difficult economic year with energy revenues rapidly sinking, hitting state finances hard.

Chabi, who is studying law, said he has no expectation of finding work after he graduates. "Algerians have been getting only promises. Nothing has improved in recent years because corruption is still there," he said.

Two former prime ministers, several ex-ministers and prominent businessmen have been jailed after anti-graft investigations that followed protests demanding the prosecution of people involved in corruption.

Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad this week said corruption and mismanagement resulted in a "delicate" economic situation for Algeria, an OPEC member country that is also facing a negative impact from falling global crude oil prices.