Buvusi kolonija reikalauja tiesos, Prancūzija nori amnezijos
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Buvusi kolonija reikalauja tiesos, Prancūzija nori amnezijos
Much of France’s elite, despite disagreements on various issues, maintain a unified stance against an apology and compensation to Algeria
Every year, Algeria commemorates several historic milestones linked to its time as “French Algeria,” legally an overseas department of France. Two stand out: Independence Day on July 5, marking sovereignty in 1962, and Revolution Day on November 1, recalling the 1954 uprising that ignited the liberation war.
These are not mere celebrations; they remind people that colonial wounds still remain. This November, the 71st anniversary arrives amid one of the worst diplomatic rifts in decades – the expulsion of diplomats, suspended cooperation, and Paris’ support for Morocco’s Western Sahara claim, seen in Algiers as a provocation.
Shadows of French colonial rule
None of Algeria’s national commemorations evokes ease or celebration, as each is steeped in remembrance of sacrifice. They recall the blood and resilience that transformed the country from a French overseas department into a sovereign state. November 1, 1954, remains the most defining – the day the National Liberation Front (FLN) launched its revolt that drew ordinary citizens into a collective struggle, not only to reclaim their land but to forge an African model of liberation. Algeria’s experience would later inspire independence movements across Africa with many adopting its strategies and organizational discipline in their fights against colonial rule, including French.
Seven decades after the revolution began the shadows of French colonial rule still hang over both Algeria and France, albeit for different reasons. Algeria demands acknowledgment, accountability, and compensation, while France prefers to forget its past, or at least confine it to the buried past.
Never before have these commemorations come at a more difficult moment for ties between Algiers and Paris. To make things worse, France openly chose to support Morocco’s claim to Western Sahara – a move Algiers perceives as both provocative and dismissive of its regional influence. Against this backdrop, the rituals of remembrance take on added significance. The same independence struggle that once demanded sacrifice now informs Algeria’s posture toward France, reminding Paris that the unresolved questions of accountability remain alive in both official diplomacy and public memory.
Struggle over memory
Algeria’s demands for recognition are specific and long-standing. One of the most poignant issues is the return of the skulls of Algerian fighters taken as trophies to France during the colonial war. These human remains were kept in French museums for over a century and, at times, publicly displayed in ways that many see as a celebration of colonial conquest rather than a recognition of brutality. In July 2020, France returned 24 of these skulls to Algeria. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune commented on the occasion, noting that the fighters “had been deprived of their natural and human right to be buried for more than 170 years,” underscoring the moral and historical weight of the repatriation.
Another grievance involves access to colonial archives, including files detailing massacres, torture, and French nuclear tests conducted in the Algerian desert in 1960. While France has partially opened some archives, many critical documents remain restricted, frustrating historians and Algerian officials alike. Beyond material restitution, Algeria continues to seek formal acknowledgment of atrocities, such as the massacres at Setif, Guelma, and Kherrata in May 1945, and the systematic use of torture during the war.
In terms of access to historical archives, historians and officials argue transparency is vital for both historical accuracy and justice; uncovering colonial abuses strengthens Algeria’s case for recognition and reparations.
Macron’s balancing acts
The struggle over narrative and memory has thus evolved into a diplomatic minefield that continues to shape France-Algeria relations today, from migration and visa restrictions to France’s waning influence in the Maghreb. Each attempt at reconciliation, including official visits, is shadowed by mistrust born of a century and a half of domination and decades of ambiguous French rhetoric since independence.
President Emmanuel Macron has oscillated between cautious acknowledgment and defensive denial. In 2017, as a candidate, he called colonialism a “crime against humanity,” yet once in office, he retreated to the safer ground of “no apology,” offering instead what he termed “acts of recognition.” This calibrated approach reflects France’s deep unease: while it appears to confront its horrible past, it wants to dodge any legal implications.
Macron questioning in 2021 whether there had ever been an “Algerian nation before French colonization” provoked outrage in Algiers, prompting the recall of the Algerian ambassador and the temporary closure of French airspace to military flights bound for the Sahel. Such missteps reveal how fragile the relationship remains, easily unsettled by words that revive colonial wounds.
Even when Macron later sought to repair the damage, calling for “truth and reconciliation” and visiting Algiers in 2022, the gestures were met with skepticism. For many Algerians, France’s reluctance to issue a formal apology, open all archives, or confront its crimes in full renders these overtures hollow. Algiers often views Paris’ shifting tone as a reflection of domestic French politics, where colonial history remains a divisive issue exploited by the far right and faced with caution by centrist leaders.
Algeria’s new leverage
Yet, the dynamic between the two countries is no longer one of dependency. Algeria today engages France from a position of relative strength. Buoyed by energy revenues, regional influence, and renewed confidence in its postcolonial identity, Algiers has learned to turn history into leverage. By invoking the colonial past in moments of tension, it reminds Paris that reconciliation cannot be achieved on French terms. The former colony now sets many of the moral and diplomatic parameters of engagement, forcing France to reckon with an uncomfortable inversion of historical power.
Algeria’s assertiveness, also, seeks new allies. In 2024, Russia-Algeria trade turnover doubled, reaching about US$2 billion, and both sides see the potential to increase this to US$10 billion by 2030. Trade with China reached approximately $12.48 billion in 2024, underscoring Algeria’s strategic pivot towards diversified partnerships.
Despite its regional setbacks, Algeria’s outlook remains solid, and France will gain little from a regionally weakened Algiers. The ongoing dispute over Western Sahara continues to be contentious, with Algeria backing the Polisario Front’s claim to independence. Paris’ recognition of Moroccan sovereignty over Western Sahara is widely seen as a manoeuvre to pressure Algeria on other bilateral issues including the colonial past. At the same time, France is eager to counterbalance its diminishing influence in the Sahel, particularly in Algeria’s southern neighbors like Niger, where French sway has been on the retreat.
It appears this time that the deterioration of ties between France and Algeria is more serious than ever. Diplomatic channels remain strained, and Algeria’s leadership feels let down by Macron’s oscillating positions despite once declaring that colonialism was a “crime against humanity.” Today, with a different political stance in place, Algerians are acutely aware of France’s patterns of selective recognition, rhetoric, and tokenism. Macron’s continued presence in the Elysee limits expectations of a genuine shift in French policy toward colonial accountability.