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Algeria sentences 49 to death for lynching innocent man and burning his body

Featured crop - Djamel Ben Ismail
Painter Djamel Ben Ismail was killed after he was falsely accused of starting deadly forest fires

Some 49 people have been handed the death sentence after the horrific lynching of an innocent painter.

The group will likely face life in prison instead of being killed, as Algeria has had a temporary prohibition on actual executions for decades.

Djamel Ben Ismail, 38, died after he was falsely accused of starting forest fires that ravaged the mountainous Berber region last August.

Flames had killed 90 people, including soldiers trying to tame the blaze.

On the day of his murder, Mr Ben Ismail had tweeted about heading 200 miles away from his home to ‘give a hand to our friends’ in fighting the fire.

When the painter heard he was suspected of arson, he turned himself in at a police station to clear his name.

But an angry mob dragged him from the back of a police van and beat and burnt him to death in the village of Larbaa Nath Irathen.

epa10127215 An animal burned by forest fires in El Kala, in Al Tarf province, northeast of Algeria, 18 August 2022. Algerian Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud announced that since the beginning of August, 106 fires have broken out, destroying 800 hectares of forest, twenty-six people have died, and several dozen others have been injured in forest fires that have affected fourteen departments in northern Algeria. EPA/STR
Fires wrecked the mountainous Berber region last August (Picture: EPA)
(FILES) In this file photo taken on August 18, 2022, an elderly Algerian woman reacts in front of her home, destroyed in a wildfire in the city of el-Kala. - An Algerian court on November 24, 2022 sentenced 49 people to death over the lynching of a man falsely accused of starting deadly forest fires in August a year before, state media reported. The North African country has, however, maintained a moratorium on carrying out death sentences since the last executions in 1993. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)
Some 90 people were killed in the blazes (Picture: Getty)

More than 100 people were involved in the incident, many of whom filmed the violence or took selfies.

The trial for the men involved in Mr Ben Ismail’s killing also had political undertones.

Five of those convicted for their involvement for the killing were also prosecuted for belonging to a banned Kabylie separatist movement called MAK.

The movement’s leader, Ferhat M’henni, based in France, was among them.

(FILES) In this file photo taken on August 18, 2022, Algerian firefighters walk next to a charred bus in which at least 12 people were reportedly burnt to death following raging fires in Algeria's city of el-Kala. - An Algerian court on November 24, 2022 sentenced 49 people to death over the lynching of a man falsely accused of starting deadly forest fires in August a year before, state media reported. The North African country has, however, maintained a moratorium on carrying out death sentences since the last executions in 1993. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)
Soldiers fighting the blaze were among those who died (Picture: Getty)

Algerian authorities have accused MAK of ordering the fires.

At the time of the fires, the region was the last bastion of the pro-democracy protest movement which helped bring down long-serving president Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

Hundreds of Algerian citizens have been jailed for trying to keep the Hirak movement alive, with marches currently banned by Algeria’s army-backed government.

Mr Ben Ismail’s father, Noureddine Ben Ismail, said he was ‘devastated’ at the killing.

He said: ‘My son left to help his brothers from Kabylie, a region he loves. They burned him alive.’

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