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Macron visits famed Disco Maghreb record shop on Algeria trip
France’s President Emmanuel Macron (centre) drinks some tea inside the disco Maghreb Shopin, the mythical label of rai music, owned by Boualem Benhaoua (3rd left) during his visit in Oran on August 27, 2022. — AFP pic

ORAN (Algeria), Aug 27 — French President Emmanuel Macron visited a celebrated record shop in Algeria on Saturday, an apparent overture to young Algerians during a trip aimed at easing what he called the "painful” history shared by the two countries.

The trauma of French colonial rule in Algeria and the bitter independence war that ended it in 1962 has haunted relations between the two countries for decades and played into a diplomatic dispute that erupted last year.

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Macron was greeted by people at the Disco Maghreb shop in the city of Oran, a stronghold of Algeria’s popular and often subversive Rai music in the 1980s and 1990s.

Boualem Benhaoua, the owner of the shop, played an important role in promoting Rai stars including Cheb Khaled — often dubbed the king of Rai — and Cheb Hasni, a youth icon of the 1990s who was killed by Islamic militants opposed to his sentimental songs.

France’s President Emmanuel Macron (centre) receives a gift from Boualem Benhaoua (2nd left), owner of the disco Maghreb Shopin, mythical label of rai music, during his visit in Oran on August 27, 2022. — AFP pic

Disco Maghreb has found renewed success after DJ Snake, a French music producer of Algerian descent, released a single named after the shop.

Macron said his visit to the store, was a "way to relay my respect, my admiration and my taste”, calling it the epicentre of Rai music.

Ties with Algeria have become more important for France because the war in Ukraine has increased demand in Europe for North African gas, and because of surging migration across the Mediterranean.

Algeria is meanwhile seeking to capitalise on higher energy prices to lock in European investment.

Macron has long wanted to turn the page with Algeria, and in 2017 he described French actions during the 1954-62 war that killed hundreds of thousands of Algerians as a "crime against humanity”.

That declaration, politically controversial in France, won him popularity in Algeria when he last visited five years ago and he was praised by young Algerians. — Reuters

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