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Algeria, France should move beyond colonial past but atrocities shouldn't be forgotten: Army chief
Algerian Army Chief General Said Chengriha has urged Algeria and France to build relations beyond the legacy of French colonialism while preserving the memory of the past.
Algeria, France should move beyond colonial past but atrocities shouldn't be forgotten: Army chief
The relations between Algeria and France have been sour in recent times. / AFP

Algerian Army Chief General Said Chengriha urged Algeria and France on Saturday to build relations beyond the legacy of French colonialism while preserving the memory of the past.

Speaking during a meeting with French Delegate Minister for Veterans and Memory Affairs Patricia Miralles, Chengriha said the two countries should work together to move past “the painful colonial legacy without forgetting it,” according to a statement by the Defence Ministry.

The meeting coincided with Algeria’s commemoration of the National Memory Day, marking the May 8, 1945, massacres under French colonial rule.

Chengriha described the massacres as a defining moment in Algeria’s struggle for independence and said Algerians who sacrificed during World War II had every right to demand “a sovereign and independent state.”

Mutual respect

He also encouraged relations between Algiers and Paris to move toward a future based on mutual respect amid rapidly changing regional and international conditions.

Earlier on Saturday, Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune received Miralles, who delivered a written message from French President Emmanuel Macron.

Miralles arrived on Friday in Algeria, accompanied by French Ambassador Stephane Romatet, who returned to his post after leaving the country in April 2025 during a diplomatic crisis between the two countries.

French colonial troops carried out the massacres in the eastern Algerian cities of Setif, Guelma and Kherrata, killing an estimated 45,000 people, according to official Algerian figures, after Algerians staged demonstrations demanding independence.

In April, Algeria’s parliament approved legislation criminalising French colonialism between 1830 and 1962, although the final text dropped demands for an official French apology and compensation.

SOURCE:AA