Algeria's Parliament Approves Law Declaring France's Colonisation a Crime
The law criminalizes colonial glorification and demands reparations for alleged crimes including torture and resource plundering, marking a political rupture in Algeria-France relations.
- On December 24, 2025, Algeria's lower house unanimously approved a law declaring France's colonisation a crime and demanding apology and reparations.
- Amid a broader diplomatic crisis between Algeria and France, tensions intensified after President Emmanuel Macron's July 2024 recognition of Moroccan control over Western Sahara soured relations last year.
- The bill lists specific alleged crimes, including nuclear tests, extrajudicial killings, physical and psychological torture, and systematic plundering, while assigning France legal responsibility, demanding `full and fair` compensation, and criminalising glorification of colonialism.
- France has so far declined to comment, with Pascal Confavreux saying last week he will not engage in `political debates taking place in foreign countries`; President Abdelmadjid Tebboune's green light signals growing hostility and political significance.
- Algeria's wider reparations push includes hosting an African states conference last month and demanding return of Baba Merzoug, while experts warn the law lacks binding international effect but could strain Algeria–France migration and bilateral ties.
137 Articles
137 Articles
Was Colonialism a Crime? Algerian Parliament Criminalizes 130 Years of French Rule
Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) – The Algerian newspaper al-Masa’ reports that on December 24, the Algerian parliament passed a law recognizing French colonialism in that country, 1830-1962, as having been a crime that involved mass killing, rape, displacement of populations, usurpation of land, and marginalization of people. The law also makes claims on France for reparations. The great Algerian historian Mahfoud Bennoune had made the case for the…
Algerian Parliament Declares French Colonial Rule a Crime, Seeks Reparations
The legislation affirms that Algeria and its people are entitled to compensation for the material and moral damage inflicted during French colonial rule Algeria’s parliament unanimously passed legislation on 24 December declaring France’s colonization of Algeria a crime, stating that “full and fair compensation for all material and moral damages” is an inalienable right of the Algerian state and people. The law was adopted by Algeria’s lower hou…
Algeria has been a French colony for over a century.
The relations between France and Algeria have reached a critical point following legislation adopted by the Algerian Parliament condemning "the crimes of...
The measure identifies more than 30 types of crimes related to the French occupation, including nuclear experiments and detonations in the desert, civilian killings, use of unconventional weapons and a ban on return for exiled resistants
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