Algeria Demands France Acknowledge ‘nuclear Crimes’ Committed on Its Soil

“We demand with one voice an official recognition from France of its full responsibility for these nuclear crimes,” Ibrahim Boughali, speaker of the People’s National Assembly, told an event commemorating France’s first nuclear test in Algeria on 13 February 1960.

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February 18, 2025

The speaker of Algeria’s lower house of parliament on February 13 called on France to officially acknowledge its responsibility for “nuclear crimes” it committed during its colonial era in the North African country, reports Anadolu Agency.

“We demand with one voice an official recognition from France of its full responsibility for these nuclear crimes,” Ibrahim Boughali, speaker of the People’s National Assembly, told an event commemorating France’s first nuclear test in Algeria on 13 February 1960.

Algeria cannot accept “a mere political acknowledgment, but an acknowledgement followed by a clear moral commitment” from France, he added.

France carried out its first nuclear test in 1960, named Blue Jerboa (GerboiseBleue in French), in the Reggane desert of southern Algeria. Paris continued its nuclear tests on Algerian territory until 1966 –

In total 17 nuclear explosions in the area, leaving devastating effects that persist to this day.

The nuclear tests “were a dark chapter in [the French] colonial history that continues to cast its shadow, as its dangerous and destructive effects continue to affect the environment and humanity,” he added.

The Algerian speaker called for forcing France to compensate the victims of the nuclear tests and clean up nuclear waste in Algeria.

Diplomatic relations between the two remain volatile, particularly due to unresolved issues stemming from France’s colonisation of Algeria.