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Bouteflika's future unclear as Algeria calls April election
Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika issued a decree on Friday calling a much-anticipated presidential election for 18 April but without saying whether he will seek a new term.
The ailing 81-year-old, who uses a wheelchair and is rarely seen in public, completes a fourth term of office on 28 April.
Despite his advanced age and poor health, there have been calls from his supporters for him to stand for a fifth term but he has yet to make his intentions clear.
By law, would-be candidates now have until 4 March to register with the constitutional court.
Uncertainty over whether Bouteflika will stand for re-election has frozen Algerian politics for months.
No candidate of note has thrown his or her hat into the ring while the president's intentions remain in doubt.
For the last presidential election in 2014, Bouteflika left it until just days before the deadline to register.
Algerian politics is notoriously opaque with the winner of every multiparty presidential election pre-selected by a shadowy elite, beginning in 1995 with victory by retired General Liamine Zeroual.
For this year's election, the membership of the kingmaking elite has changed.
During his fourth term, Bouteflika finally made good on a longstanding pledge to reduce the power of the traditional powerbrokers by disbanding the DRS intelligence agency in 2016.
But under his watch, business networks have become increasingly entwined with the political structure, leaving it difficult to judge with confidence who will be put to voters as the regime's anointed candidate.
The president's brother and special adviser Said has been widely seen as Algeria's de facto ruler since Abdelaziz suffered a stroke in 2013 that severely impaired his speech.
But many believe Said will wish to remain in the shadows behind the throne, rather than be the public candidate.