FRANCE has recalled its ambassador to Algeria and ordered 12 Algerian diplomats to leave Paris as a diplomatic row escalated.
Algeria earlier this week expelled 12 French officials after one of its consular staff was arrested over the kidnapping of a government critic living in Paris. President Emmanuel Macron’s office called the move “unjustified and incomprehensible”.
However, relations have been on the slide for months. Observers have described the crisis as unprecedented since Algeria secured independence from France in 1962.
There had been hopes that tensions would ease after France’s foreign minister held talks with Algeria’s President Abdelmadjid Tebboune in Algiers earlier this month.
The two countries have blamed each other for what Paris has called a “sudden deterioration in our bilateral relations”.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said “Algerian authorities have chosen escalation”.
But Algerian minister Sofiane Chaib said the latest “fabricated” spat was down to French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau, when relations had been in a “phase of warming up”.
They soured last year when Macron announced France was recognising Moroccan sovereignty of Western Sahara and backed a plan for limited autonomy for the disputed territory.
Algeria backs the pro-independence Polisario Front in Western Sahara and is seen as its main ally.
French-Algerian novelist Boualem Sansal was then arrested at Algiers airport in November and jailed last month for five years.
Prosecutors said he had undermined national security for making remarks that questioned Algeria’s borders.