Abdel-Hakim Hadaqa - Algeria

It seems that the Algerian President Abdel Majid Taboun quickly set out to implement his electoral agenda by undertaking "wide political, constitutional and legal reforms, in order to respond to the demands of the popular movement" as he put it.

After about 18 days after he was sworn in, he initiated the appointment of a first minister, a new government, and a number of officials in various locations.

Last Wednesday, Ahmed Arraba was appointed to head an expert committee charged with drafting proposals to review the constitution within sixty days, before opening wide consultations with actors in political life and civil society.

Before that, the courts released 76 detainees held at the time of the movement at once, but what is remarkable so far is the failure of the president to refer to the fate of the dialogue that he pledged on the day the presidential results were announced, saying that "he is extending his hand to the movement for Algeria."

Observers believe that Tabun may impose a fait accompli by translating the intended dialogue by inviting the spectra of the movement to participate in the open workshops for societal discussion, foremost among which is the constitution paper.

Al-Jazeera Net polled readers in the "National Dialogue Forum" as the largest gathering of the opposition, on the developments of the scene after the presidential election.

She asked about their vision of the "untold" dialogue, the conditions for its success and the basic demands for any successful reform.

Makri: The system is now facing four major challenges (Al-Jazeera)

Weighing the scales
"The balance of power created by the movement has achieved great positives, but the march of political transition establishing the rule of Islam has not been completed," said Abdul-Razzaq Maqri, head of the Peace Society Movement.

And he considered that the system is now facing four major challenges, the first of which is controlling the political game absolutely, by fully absorbing the movement and then ending it, and resolving the struggle against its opponents inside the state and in society.

In his speech to Al-Jazeera Net, he dealt with addressing the Libyan crisis, which represents a great danger to the whole country, then the escalating economic crisis and the near total collapse of the exchange reserves, the last of which challenges the upcoming legislative and local elections.

In his view, it does not seem through the ministerial formation uh there is a vision of how to get out of this crisis, just as the formed government does not have a political and trade union belt that supports it in the face of expected social tensions, which can lead to the resumption of the movement with a new nature that may be severe, as he described .

Dzairi: Improving the situation requires the president to make bold decisions (Al-Jazeera)

In turn, the coordinator of the Confederation of Syndicates, Sadiq Dziri, said that the de facto leadership that was produced by the elections alongside the government finds itself today in the face of the same crisis with popular mobility and more acute demands.

Speaking to Al-Jazeera Net, he stressed that improving the situation requires the President-elect to take bold decisions to rebuild the lost bridges of trust, such as completing the release of the detainees, as well as opening the media field, in preparation for opening the real reform workshops.

He demanded that the movement remain constant and pressing until the response to the demands of radical change and estrangement with the former regime, with the need to reconsider the slogans raised, and to stay away from sowing hatred and discrimination between the Algerians and their institutions, as he put it.

The restoration of the republic
On the other hand, presidential candidate Abdul Qadir bin Quraina believes that the situation after December 12 proved the effectiveness of the constitutional option in resolving the crisis, and produced elected institutions that have restored the state of the republic.

He told Al Jazeera Net that forming a government is partial in the new path because it is still appointed with the same previous constitutional mechanisms, and it cannot be judged now, as it is facing a real test in overcoming pressing crises.

He considered that Algeria is witnessing a real transformation that requires political will, in light of a new and collective vision of internal developments and the regional and international milieu.

Abdelaziz Garmoul, head of the Free Patriots Movement, also believes that "the situation in Algeria is moving in a positive direction. The state has regained its internal and external presence, and there is a political party that we are talking to."

He added to Al-Jazeera Net, "We can say that we are optimistic with caution and vigilance, we give enough opportunity for the various parties to arrange their affairs, and then we see a way to deal with them, and what we were afraid of. Passed safely." He called for rearranging the ranks and papers and engaging in a long-term and insightful political work.

Conditions for dialogue
On the other hand, regarding the "postponed" dialogue, the head of the Peace Society Movement returned to say, "The president pledged constitutional and legal reforms and launched a dialogue in this regard, and it is our duty to improve our belief and support him in his endeavor."

He was required for his success to be transparent and credible, and to meet the demands of the movement in achieving reforms that guarantee the embodiment of the popular will, and ending the era of the intervention of the military and the administration and all the actors within the system in shaping the political scene, again preparing for dialogue without reservation.

For his part, the coordinator of the Confederation of Syndicates affirmed that achieving the required leap requires opening a real, comprehensive and sovereign dialogue in implementing what is agreed upon.

He added that the solutions were adopted by creating concessions within the framework of a national consensus to solve the political crisis and build new Algeria in which everyone contributes without exclusion or marginalization.

Bin Quraina: The elections proved the efficacy of the constitutional solution and restored the state of the republic (Al-Jazeera)

As for Ben Quraina, the dialogue was considered the first focal point in the expected reforms, and the president promised him to overcome the political rift in the country, according to his expression.

In order for him to succeed, he said, he must be supervised by popular and partisan personalities who work on a comprehensive level that does not exclude any party and does not exclude any proposals.

For his part, Garmoul called for a dialogue without preconditions that would be multi-polar, "in which political and social activities are aware of the conditions the country is going through, and the goals behind it."

He stressed that "it is not possible to enter into any dialogue with the presence of prisoners of conscience, closed media, and marginalized opposition."