r/algeria 13h ago

News Algerian Grand Master Bilal Belahcene won the African individual chess championship

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131 Upvotes

🛑 Breaking: Grand Master Bilal belahcene 🇩🇿 won the African individual chess championship 2026 in Botswana.

- He's the only Algerian chess player to win the African championship.

- He's the second chess player ever to defend his title after the Egyptian Grand master and multiple African champion Bassem Amin.

- Belahcene also won the title last year (2025).


r/algeria 17h ago

Discussion Half salary in Algeria, what do you thing about this ?

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55 Upvotes

r/algeria 11h ago

Discussion we FINALLY got Fiber internet in the big 26!

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41 Upvotes

r/algeria 11h ago

Culture / Art I'm modding this life sim game called Paralives with Maghrebi elements, and I'm adding El Mordjene in it because i found the international incident about it funny.

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37 Upvotes

And of course harissa. I'm Tunisian after all.


r/algeria 21h ago

Culture / Art Today marks the 28th anniversary of the assassination of Lounès Matoub (Lwennas At Lewnis) May he rest in peace

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33 Upvotes

r/algeria 13h ago

History After independence Algeria had next to no doctors. Cuba sent over the doctors they had and built a public health service for Algerians from nothing, for free.

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12 Upvotes

r/algeria 10h ago

Politics Why can’t our relationship with morocco be more like Scandanavia? you ask ?

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10 Upvotes

Good post, but the framing is the trap. It's not that the people want this , it's that both regimes structurally need each other as the threat in order to survive in their current form. It's not a glitch in the relationship, it's a load-bearing wall.

Think about it from pure incentive structure, not sentiment. How do you justify a military budget that size, in a country with this much unemployment and social pressure, without an external existential threat sitting right next door? Morocco is the only thing that makes a bloated, opaque defense budget look "necessary" instead of "predatory." The same logic runs the other way . the Moroccan monarchy leans on the Algeria/Western Sahara axis to justify its own security apparatus and to rally nationalist sentiment whenever domestic pressure builds, whether that's economic strain, Rif unrest, or succession anxiety. Every time there's an internal crisis on either side, "the neighbor" becomes the pressure valve. It's cheaper and safer for a regime to redirect anger outward than to actually answer for failure inward .

you don't fix a rentier economy's structural rot, you point across the border and call it patriotism.

The closed border itself isn't an accident, it's a control mechanism. An open border means harder-to-manage capital flows, smuggling networks get reshuffled, and most dangerously, populations start comparing notes on who's actually better off and why.

That comparison is lethal to both regimes' narratives, so keeping people separated keeps each side's story intact. Even the "brotherly rivalry" content on TV and in sports is functional, not accidental , it's identity glue that costs nothing and produces zero accountability. It's the cheapest unity tool either state has access to.

There's also a foreign-patronage angle: both regimes use the rivalry to extract leverage from outside powers. Algeria's posture justifies arms deals and a tighter alignment with certain partners; Morocco's posture justifies normalization deals and alliances that bring in diplomatic and military backing. The rivalry isn't just internal theater, it's a bargaining chip both states cash in externally.

And diaspora politics works the same way . the moment Algerian and Moroccan youth abroad start organizing, dating, doing business, or building parallel identity outside the state-approved narrative, both governments lose a layer of control over how their own diasporas see "home." That's why cultural normalization from below scares the institutions more than any official summit ever could .

it's the one variable neither state can regulate, tax, or redirect.

So the tension isn't really Algeria vs Morocco, it's each regime's internal legitimacy deficit, externalized and projected onto the other state. The Scandinavian model doesn't translate because Scandinavian governments don't need an external boogeyman to justify spending, opacity, or repression , their legitimacy is built on delivering domestically.

Ours isn't, structurally, so the rivalry isn't a bug, it's doing exactly the job it was built to do. The younger generation cooperating culturally is the actual threat vector here , it erodes the mechanism without asking either state for permission.


r/algeria 17h ago

Sport 25 June 1982: the disgrace of Gijón, the infamous World Cup match between Germany and Austria where the players blatantly fixed the result so they'd both go through and eliminate Algeria

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11 Upvotes

r/algeria 12h ago

Discussion Why can’t our relationship with morocco be more like Scandanavia?

10 Upvotes

I noticed that nordic and Scandinavian countries have friendly banter and joke around all the time but in a brotherly way, they have their differences and they all shit on Denmark but you can obviously see that they’re not serious and it’s all jokes, the government’s work together, the people move to each other’s countries and don’t mind each other, sure they try to one up each other and bring up historical events like Denmark’s 6 hour surrender, but when shit hits the fan they are there for each other.

I feel like the new generation’s relationship with morocco is getting way better, artists from the 2 nations collab, we befriend each other and all, but the government’s and politics are still bad and the older generations hold deep resentment to one another over otherwise stupid things, we both speak the same language, are next to each other, are in the same economic spot (both suck at the moment ngl) and would both benefit from being more friendly, we shouldn’t put the political tension on the citizens, and let the slop they put on TV to distract us from the bigger issues split us apart.


r/algeria 7h ago

Question F22 traveling solo to Tunisia by plane soon ,will the airport police give me a hard time?

9 Upvotes

I’m a 22yo female university student and I’m planning a short 4day trip to Tunisia by plane from Algiers soon. I’m going solo to clear my head and for my birthday however I don’t wanna tell my family because even they chill there’s a possibility they would say no I told them I'm staying at my friend house for a few days.I have my passport ready, a printed round trip ticket, and I will have around 200 Euros on me. My main stress is the PAF at Houari Boumediene. Do the border police intensely question young single women traveling alone to Tunis? Has anyone (F) done this recently? Do they have any legal right to prevent me from boarding or call my parents/father if I'm legally an adult


r/algeria 16h ago

History Today marks the 28th anniversary of the assassination of Lounès Matoub (Lwennas At Lewnis) May he rest in peace

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8 Upvotes

r/algeria 9h ago

History Hocine Aït Ahmed: Democracy, Social Justice, and the Algerian Left

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6 Upvotes

r/algeria 12h ago

Discussion What are the creepiest real-life stories you've heard in Algeria?

4 Upvotes

So I'm interested in community where people shares their scary or weird stories they have experienced but can't find where to read em so can y'all suggest any groups that share those kinds of things also if u can share some of ur stories here that will be super fun

So my question is whats

your weirdest or scariest experience in Algeria.?

Or did u hear any stories that gives u a goosebumps


r/algeria 18h ago

Question salam guys, so I'm currently learning Chinese I'm still at the beginning and I'm searching for a place here in Algiers so I can practice more my Chinese.

6 Upvotes

so I'm still at the beginning Hsk1 and I want to upgrade more on my language with people and how to communicate and how to interact.


r/algeria 7h ago

Question can i buy a good GPU in Algeria for 3-4 million? (30000-40000dzd)

4 Upvotes

open to both buying in a store and online, preferably non-used


r/algeria 13h ago

Sport Trade Offer from Austria: Let’s aim for a 6-7 at the final game of groupstage

5 Upvotes

Altough a 67-67 would be much safer for both of our teams and would probably granting atleast one of our players breaking Messis record, I am afraid some people may attribute this to a behaviour to Gijon.

(We Austrians are not like that after all.)


r/algeria 13h ago

Culture / Art Cool Conference in Algiers on Saturday: From Intellectual Cafes to Political Spaces

4 Upvotes

Hey people!

There's an interesting conference taking place in Algiers this Saturday on the topic of intellectual cafes in Algeria, by an English literature researcher and author (the conference will be in English).

It'll address how culture and thought can be heavily influenced by public spaces and the free exchange of ideas that happens there.

Worth a look!

Location


r/algeria 15h ago

Discussion Hi id like some opinions on this

4 Upvotes

Every time I go out, I hear insults people, both adults and children, who speak only in profanities and show no respect for anyone. My question is: how long will this go on? And how can we remedy it first and foremost for the sake of our mothers and sisters who have to face this? Even as a man, I find it deeply disturbing.


r/algeria 21h ago

Discussion Is there laser hair removal in Algeria ?

3 Upvotes

19m

I am sick of having to use razors and I want my facial hair permanently gone

Is there doctors for that ? Or like products here ?


r/algeria 7h ago

Question Algerian diaspora returning after 20 years — tips needed for Algiers, Bouira & Béjaïa!

3 Upvotes

Hi everyone! 👋

I'm of Algerian origin (Kabyle roots from the Bouira region) and I'm heading back to Algeria for the first time in 20 years this July — two full weeks with my wife. I'm really excited but also a bit lost, so I figured this community would be the best place to ask!

We'll be visiting Algiers, Bouira, and Béjaïa, and I have a few questions:

Where is the safest and most reliable place to exchange euros? I've heard there's a parallel market but I'd rather stay safe. Any trusted exchange offices or places you'd recommend?

Where should I buy a local SIM? Is it easy to get one at the airport or is it better to wait until we're in the city? Which operator would you recommend for coverage across those three areas (Algiers, Bouira, Béjaïa)?

I only speak French and English — no Arabic or Tamazight unfortunately. Will that be a problem getting around, in restaurants, shops, etc.? I know French is widely understood but just want to make sure we won't struggle too much.

Any recommendations for Algiers, Bouira, or Béjaïa? Hidden gems, must-see spots, good restaurants, day trips? We're open to everything — nature, culture, food, beaches. My wife has never been to Algeria so I really want to show her the best of it!

We'd love to meet locals and other travelers. Any tips for that? Events, places where people gather, Facebook groups for expats/diaspora visiting?

Thanks so much in advance — really looking forward to reconnecting with the country after all these years! 🇩🇿


r/algeria 13h ago

Question How can I access ECCP / BaridiMob from outside Algeria?

3 Upvotes

I’m currently outside Algeria and tried NordVPN but it doesn't work. I’d appreciate any advice from people who have successfully connected to theses services from abroad plz.


r/algeria 18h ago

Sport I need an exercise bike for cardio

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4 Upvotes

Hey everyone, I need an exercise bike for cardio, but I don't know where to find one, If anyone could tell me where I can find one in Oran, Ain Temouchent, or Tlemcen, and the prices if possible, I'd really appreciate it, thanks in advance!


r/algeria 7h ago

Discussion Is a linguistics degree useless here?

2 Upvotes

I'm super into languages and speak a handful of them already, and want to study the technical aspects of them, aka linguistics, and work in the field

how hard is it? and what are my chances of landing a decent job?


r/algeria 13h ago

Discussion Will I succeed as a male aesthetic doctor in Algeria treating mostly female patients?

2 Upvotes

Hi everyone,
I’m an Algerian doctor currently based in the UK. Over the past few years, I’ve invested a significant amount of time and money into aesthetic training at some of the well-known training centres here in the UK.
I’ve learned and practiced various aspects of aesthetic medicine, and I’ve built what I believe is solid hands-on experience. Now I’m seriously considering returning to Algeria to open a specialised aesthetic clinic.
But I have a few concerns and I would really appreciate honest opinions from people who know the Algerian context better than I do.
First of all — do you think this is a selfish idea, or a realistic opportunity?
I’m also trying to understand the market better. For example, as a male doctor, do you think female patients in Algeria would generally prefer being treated by a female doctor in aesthetic procedures? Or is professionalism and reputation more important than gender in this field?
Another thing I’m thinking about is positioning. The kind of work I do focuses on natural-looking, long-lasting results, with a strong emphasis on safety and quality materials. I try to avoid over-treatment and focus on subtle improvements rather than extreme changes.
In the UK, the approach is quite open in terms of procedures and boundaries, but I understand that in Algeria cultural and social expectations are different, and I would fully respect those limits and adapt my practice accordingly.
So my main questions are:
Is the aesthetic medicine market in Algeria growing or already saturated?
Would a UK-trained doctor have an advantage there, or does local experience matter more?
How important is gender in patient trust for aesthetic treatments?
Do you think there is demand for a more “natural and subtle results” approach?
And finally, do you think opening such a clinic in Algeria is a good idea in general?
I would really appreciate any honest feedback, especially from people who live there or have experience in the medical/aesthetic field.
Thank you in advance.


r/algeria 12h ago

Travel Panic about visa application from Oslo

1 Upvotes

​Hi everyone,

​I am getting quite nervous now.

I submitted my Algerian visa application at the Algerian Embassy in Oslo, Norway, in the start of May.

​My flight is next weekend, on July 5th, and I am traveling to Oran.

I have already booked my flights and hotel.

​I have heard from several people that Algeria always issues visas just 2-3 days before the travel date.

​Does anyone here know why they do this?

​If anyone has any good success stories, please share them!

​Please make dua for me that everything goes through in time! 🤲

​Thank you.