Amel Hadjadj

Algerian human rights activist (born 1986)

Amel Hadjadj (Arabic: آمال حجاج; born 1986) is an Algerian human rights activist. She is the founder of Le Journal Féministe Algérien (lit.'Algerian Feminist Journal'), which reports on feminist news and initiatives. Hadjadj has also written for national and regional media outlets on feminism and the rights of minority groups, including LGBTQ people.[1]

Biography

Hadjadj was born in 1986 in Constantine, Algeria. She initially worked in market and business consultancy before working for non-governmental organisations focused on gender and feminism.[2]

Hadjadj is a member of the Algerian Feminist Association, in addition to the Kif Kif movement, which promoted LGBTQ+ rights in Algeria.[3] She founded Le Journal Féministe Algérien, which aimed to share news and initiatives about feminist movements.[2]

As a result of her activism, Hadjadj has been surveilled by Algerian security forces, including being interrogated at an airport and having her home raided.[3] On 21 November 2019, Hadjadj was arbitrarily detained and physically assaulted by police officers outside a court in Algiers; the officers also made derogatory remarks about her during the arrest. Hadjadj was subsequently detained for two hours, during which she time she was prohibited from contacting her family or lawyer, before being released.[3]

In 2020, Hadjadj criticised the Algerian government's decision to repeal a 2012 law that had introduced a women's quota system in municipal, provincial and parliamentary levels of governance to increase women's participation in politics; the new 2021 law reduced women's minimum guaranteed representation from 31.6% to 8%. She described the decision as evidence of Algerian authorities' "discrimination" against Algerian women, noting that the use of "competence" to justify the decision to reduce the quotas was untrue due to Algerian women being on average more educated than men. Hadjadj called for the quota system to be reinstated.[4]

Hadjadj has cited a cycle between the understanding in Algeria that women are "inferior", which in turn causes Algerian women to "doubt" their own leadership abilities. She has called for a review of legislation to repeal any clauses that are discriminatory against women, particularly within family law. She has called for a repeal to allow women to receive their inheritance even if they do not have a husband or sons.[4][5] Hadjadj has been critical of the Algerian Family Code, a 1984 code of laws which she described as "unconstitutional" due to it not achieving equality between men and women, including article 66, which caused women to lose custody of their children if they remarried; in addition to other articles that allowed men being allowed to divorce with justification or leave the country with their children without permission, while women were not. Hadjadj praised some steps made by the government, such as the 2005 repeal that saw "duty of obedience" principle legally expected of women abolished.[5]

In 2024, Hadjadj published a short story, The Bitterness of Death, the Loneliness of Separation, a fictional account of a real Algerian lesbian mourning the loss of her partner. It was published in Untold Mag.[2] She has written for outlets including Syria Untold.[6]

In 2025, Hadjadj participated in the Global March to Gaza from Algeria to the Rafah Border Crossing between Egypt and Palestine, alongside Sarah Lalou and Yakouta Benrouguibi, in support of Palestinian rights..[7]

References

  1. ^ "Amel Hadjadj". Front Line Defenders. Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b c Hadjadj, Amel (23 October 2024). "The bitterness of death, the loneliness of separation: On the right to grieve". Untold Mag. Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b c "Arbitrary detention of woman human rights defender Amel Hadjadj". Front Line Defenders. 28 November 2019. Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ a b Zouine, Majda (14 October 2025). "Gender-Based Discrimination: How Algerian Women Are Denied Promotion and Excluded From Leadership Positions". I Will Not Stay Silent. Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ a b Zouin, Majda (28 June 2024). "حوار| الناشطة النسوية أمال حجاج: "قانون الأسرة الجزائري يعيق تطور المجتمع بأكمله"". Hounna (in Arabic). Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "Amel Hadjadj". Syria Untold. Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ Hadjadj, Amel (24 October 2025). "Algerian feminists at the frontiers of solidarity". International Viewpoint. Retrieved 11 January 2026.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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