WATCH: Inside the youth-led protests that forced Algeria president to not run for a fifth term

Sahraoui is a member of the Algerian photography group Collective 220. He sometimes works with a traditional digital camera and sometimes with film, but his camera of choice is his iPhone, which he likes for its "poetic" square format. "It's not that I want to be labeled as 'the iPhone photographer' – it's just a tool I feel comfortable with," he tells me. "In certain situations, the phone has allowed me to slip by unnoticed, but people aren't stupid – we photographers have a certain posture; our movements give us away."
In central Algiers, following prayers on the 1st of March, anti-riot police block the capital's busiest road.
During the 8th of March protest in Mascara, young people gather beneath a giant Algerian flag.
Near the Algiers Fine Arts School, a protester lost consciousness from tear gas. Here, people form a circle around him, allowing him to come to.
By the Presidential Palace, a protester stuck five empty tear gas cartridges onto his fingers – a reference to the fifth term that President Abdelaziz Bouteflika was hoping for.
A giant flag blankets the streets of Mascara.
Protesters gather in central Algiers.
Riot police in Algiers prevent protesters from gathering.
Protesters pass through a working-class neighbourhood in Mascara.
The crowd watches a man climb the statue of the Emir Abdelkader in Mascara.
Following some skirmishes, young people find refuge on a wall surrounding the Algiers Fine Arts School.
Protesters wait inside the Algiers Fine Arts School.
