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But perhaps what is most significant about the revolution is the vital role played by women, as Sara Benaissa reports. It has seen millions of people, including Algerian women, take to the streets in Algeria, France and even London.
Students were fed up with a stagnant and corrupt government, and when then President Abdelaziz Bouteflika put his name on the ballot for a potential fifth term in office, students flocked to the streets in organised, peaceful protests.
They marched in their thousands to demand change and more opportunities for young Algerians. Their protests spread like wildfire on social media, until millions of people of all generations flooded Algerian cities with flags and banners demanding the whole system change. The demonstrations united the whole country , from the young and disenfranchised to the older battle-weary generation who lived through French-colonised Algeria, independence and a civil war.
Algerians marched to see real change in their lifetimes, to witness the biggest country in Africa rise from systemic corruption and walk out of the shadows of civil war. It is without doubt a rare and historic revolution. It started and has remained peaceful, it toppled a sitting President, put many corrupt officials in prison and is still going strong one year on, even after the Presidential election in December.