Algeria cancelled the accreditation of France 24, the communications ministry said on Sunday, a day after parliamentary elections in the former French colony, Al Jazeera reports.
The move was due to the satellite news channel’s “clear and repeated hostility towards our country and its institutions”, the ministry and government spokesman Ammar Belhimer said in quotes carried by the state news agency APS.
Belhimer also accused France 24 of failing to respect journalistic rules and ethics, saying it “practices disinformation and manipulation in addition to confirmed hostility against Algeria”.
The outlet said authorities had given the channel a final warning on March 13 over its “coverage of Friday marches” of the long-running Hirak anti-government protest movement.
In a statement on Sunday, the public broadcast service said it was “surprised not to have received any explanation” for the move, stressing that “we cover Algerian news transparently, independently and honestly.”
The French government, which has tense ties with Algiers, did not immediately comment.
Both foreign and local journalists in Algeria often face bureaucratic and unclear procedures to obtain permission to work.
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranked Algeria 146 out of 180 countries and territories in its 2020 World Press Freedom Index, a 27-place drop from 2015.
The withdrawal of France 24’s accreditation came a day after the North African country held legislative elections, with almost 70 percent of voters abstaining according to official figures.
It also comes amid mounting official pressure against Hirak and a string of arrests of journalists and opposition figures.
Independent journalist Khaled Drareni and the director of a pro-reform radio station, Ihsane El-Kadi were among seven people arrested on Thursday.