Breaking
World leaders gather for emergency summit on climate crisis • Tech giants announce major breakthrough in fusion energy • Stocks reach all-time high as global trade recovers • Global News 24 launches premium news experience • Stay updated with real-time headlines •
BACK TO NEWS
World12 days ago

French ambassador returns to Algeria in bid to ease Paris-Algier tensions

France 24
France 24

Verified Publisher

French ambassador returns to Algeria in bid to ease Paris-Algier tensions

France has sent back its ambassador to Algeria in a bid to ease tensions between Paris and its former North African colony. The envoy was recalled more than a year ago after relations between the two countries soured over France’s decision to back Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed Western Sahara.

Advertising French ambassador returns to Algeria in bid to ease Paris-Algier tensions Africa France has sent back its ambassador to Algeria in a bid to ease tensions between Paris and its former North African colony. The envoy was recalled more than a year ago after relations between the two countries soured over France’s decision to back Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed Western Sahara.

Issued on: 08/05/2026 - 16:03 2 min Reading time Share By: FRANCE 24 French Ambassador to Algeria, Stéphane Romatet, was recalled to Paris more than a year ago.

© Mohamed el-Shahed, AFP file photo France’s ambassador to Algeria has returned to the North African country along with a senior envoy set to commemorate a colonial-era massacre, a move seeking to improve frayed relations.

Ties between France and Algeria have been fraught since 2024, when Paris officially backed Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed Western Sahara , where Algeria supports the pro-independence Polisario Front .

French Deputy Armed Forces Minister Alice Rufo landed in Setif, eastern Algeria, on Friday to attend ceremonies marking the 1945 repression of mainly Muslim Algerian protesters by French colonial troops.

Rufo was accompanied by Ambassador Stéphane Romatet, who will resume his duties in the North African country more than a year after being recalled from his post.

The visit marks a major sign of rapprochement between Algiers and Paris, with the Élysée saying it reflected the “determination to address relations between France and Algeria with honesty, while respecting all the memories connected to them” and to “restore an effective dialogue”.

The 1945 crackdown led by French General Raymond Duval left as many as 45,000 people dead, according to Algerian figures. Pro-independence protests broke out following a rally on May 8 of that year marking the allied victory over Nazi Germany.

Tensions between Algiers and Paris worsened in 2024 over the arrest of French-Algerian writer Boualem Sansal – who was pardoned last November – and in April 2025 when an Algerian consular official was charged in France over the alleged abduction of Algerian influencer and government critic Amir DZ.

Read more Novelist Boualem Sansal elected to Académie française months after release from Algerian jail Friday’s visit is the second trip to Algeria by a French cabinet ministry in less than three months, following Interior Minister Laurent Nunez’s visit in February.

While both countries show signs of a diplomatic thaw, an unresolved issue remains the detention of a French sports journalist in Algeria on terror charges.

Christophe Gleizes, 37, was arrested in May 2024 while travelling to northeastern Algeria’s Kabylia region to write about the country’s most decorated football club, Jeunesse Sportive de Kabylie .

In June last year, he was sentenced to seven years in jail for “glorifying terrorism” after being accused of having been in contact with a member of the Movement for the Self-Determination of Kabylie (MAK), a foreign-based group that Algiers has designated a terrorist organisation.

His family said last week Gleizes had withdrawn his appeal to Algeria’s highest court, a move seen as opening the way for a presidential pardon.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP) Advertising Keywords for this article Algeria France diplomacy Kabylie

Read original story at France 24

Continue reading this article on the publisher's website.

Visit Website

More from France 24

‘The aim is to erase our identity’: How south Lebanon’s cultural heritage is going up in smoke
Technology
France 24
France 24about 2 hours ago1 min read

‘The aim is to erase our identity’: How south Lebanon’s cultural heritage is going up in smoke

The Israeli Army is accused of destroying important cultural and religious sites as part of its widespread demolition campaign in southern Lebanon. The NGO Green Southerners has been documenting the destruction of churches, mosques and archaeological sites and denounces what they say is a calculated attack on the historic link between locals and their homeland.

Police sue to block Jan 6 rioters from payouts via Trump's 'Anti-Weaponization Fund'
Technology
France 24
France 24about 3 hours ago1 min read

Police sue to block Jan 6 rioters from payouts via Trump's 'Anti-Weaponization Fund'

Two police officers who defended the US Capitol from a pro-Trump mob on January 6, 2021, filed suit Wednesday to block those who took part in the violence from receiving payouts from a new fund totaling nearly $1.8 billion. The fund, destined for Trump allies claiming political prosecution, was created this week in exchange for President Donald Trump dropping his $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS.

Digital bottleneck: How Iran wants to use internet access for leverage in the war
Technology
France 24
France 24about 3 hours ago1 min read

Digital bottleneck: How Iran wants to use internet access for leverage in the war

Tehran is floating the idea of charging the world’s largest tech companies – including Google, Meta, Microsoft and Amazon – for using the undersea internet cables crossing the Strait of Hormuz in a new attempt to exploit its control over the critical waterway to ratchet up economic pressure on the West.