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Voters go to the polls amid anger over economy

Candidates have struggled to inspire voters disillusioned by what many see as a stagnant political system.

Members of the ruling Algerian National Liberation Front campaign ahead of May 4 elections. Officials fear a low turnout among a public disillusioned by an opaque political system and what many see as the government's failure to keep its promises

But despite the urgent challenges facing the country, candidates have struggled to inspire voters disillusioned by what many see as a stagnant political system and the government's failure to keep its promises.

The North African country weathered the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings with massive spending on wages and subsidies that depleted government coffers.

But a 2014 collapse in crude oil prices forced the government to raise taxes and mothball many public projects.

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Today, in a country of 40 million where half the population is under 30, one young person in three is unemployed.

Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal urged those angry about the state of the economy "to be patient".

"There is no more money" in state coffers, he said in a speech on Saturday reported by local media.

Some 45,000 police officers were deployed to guard the more than 53,000 polling stations across the country.

Polls are due to close at 7 pm (1800 GMT) and the first results are expected late on Friday morning.

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Officials, fearing a low turnout, have spent weeks urging people to vote.

Sellal called for a "massive vote", urging women to wake their husbands early, refuse them coffee and "drag" them to the polling stations.

"If they resist, hit them with a stick," he told an all-female audience in the eastern city of Setif.

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who has used a wheelchair and rarely been seen in public since a 2013 stroke, has said a strong turnout was essential for "the stability of the country".

The authorities have even used mosques to spread the message, with imams urging Algerians to go to the polls.

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But voters have shown little enthusiasm. Streets in Algiers were nearly deserted Thursday morning -- although polling stations were expected to be busier in the afternoon.

In a video posted online days before polling day and seen by more than two million people, one Algerian said the government had broken its promises to tackle an acute housing shortage and improve health care.

Despite that, Bouteflika's National Liberation Front (FLN) and its coalition ally, the Rally for National Democracy (RND), are expected to keep their majority in parliament.

In the 2012 election, the FLN, which dominated Algerian politics since independence in 1962, won 221 of the 462 seats in parliament.

Islamists, who held 60 seats in the outgoing parliament, represent the country's main opposition force.

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In the last election, held a year after Arab Spring-inspired street protests, they had hoped to replicate the gains of their peers in Egypt and Tunisia.

Instead, they suffered their worst ever electoral defeat.

This year, they have formed two electoral alliances in bids to do better.

But since Algeria adopted a multi-party system in 1989, the opposition has repeatedly accused the ruling parties of electoral fraud.

Turnout has often been low, registering 43.14 percent in 2012 and 35.65 percent in 2007.

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Even those figures were inflated, experts say.

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