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Zawahiri calls for Algeria revolution

WASHINGTON, Oct 12 – Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri called on Algerians to overthrow the government of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, and praised Libyan rebels for seizing Tripoli, in a new video released Tuesday.

Osama bin Laden’s successor Zawahiri urged Libyans to adopt sharia law as they rebuild the country after the NATO-backed rebels’ ouster of longtime leader Moamer Kadhafi.

“The first thing that this NATO will ask of you is to relinquish your Islam,” Zawahiri said according to a translation provided by US monitoring service SITE, dismissing the military alliance as a “Western gang”.

“Be careful of the plots of the West and its henchmen while you are building your new state. Don’t allow them to deceive you and steal your sacrifices and suffering.”

Zawahiri, wearing white, was shown sitting in a cloth-covered chair in front of a green backdrop in the 13-minute video released on extremist forums, SITE said.

The veteran Egyptian militant and long-time Al-Qaeda number two took over the jihadist network after Bin Laden was killed in a clandestine raid by US Navy commandos in Pakistan on May 2.

“And if I congratulated our people in Libya for their victory over the tyrant, I call upon our people in Algeria to follow their footsteps,” Zawahiri said in the video.

“Here are your brothers in Tunisia and then in Libya having thrown out the two tyrants to the trash can of history, so why don’t you revolt against your tyrant?”

Bouteflika’s government has faced protests resembling those that ousted neighbouring Tunisia’s dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, but the protest movement has been successfully contained by security forces.

The video is the latest in which the militant chief, who is now Washington’s most wanted man, has attempted to seize on the “Arab Spring” revolutions.

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Al-Qaeda has been absent from the popular protests that have swept the Arab world this year leading to the fall of leaders in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia and provoking major unrest elsewhere.

Analysts argue that the phenomenon has left the global terror outfit weakened and increasingly irrelevant.

The United States said last month that it believed Zawahiri, who has been in hiding since the United States declared a “war on terror” after the September 11, 2001 attacks, was still in Pakistan.

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