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Boudiaf was killed by one of his own bodygards, Lambarek Boumaarafi, presented officialy as an Islamic fundamentalist, and a sympathiser of the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), who acted alone. He was assassinated in Annaba while addressing a public meeting on june 29th, later broadcasted by the national TV.
He received 3 bullets, two in the head and one in his back[1]. He was president during less than two years, since his return from exile in Morocco to rule over the HCE (High Comity of State) that emerged as a constitutional alternative to the Islamic State declared by the FIS after wining 1991 first democratic elections in the country since its independence in 1962. His mission was to crush the FIS, stop the civil war and restore order[2].
Boudiaf was one of the few lasting Algerian war veterans still alive at the time. After Krim Belkacem, assassinated in Frankfurt 1970, and Mohamed Khider assassinated in Madrid in 1967, and Mohamed Benyahia the foreign minister assassinated on the Iran–Iraq border when working on a walk out from the First Gulf War.
War against corruption
[edit]A month before his assassination he ordered the arrest of General Mostafa Beloucif,[3] charged in front of the Blida tribunal of misusing public funds. Khaled Nezzar was also dismissed from his post of Defence Minister for the same reasons. Boudiaf also ordered the arrest of a Tamanrasset buisnessman involved in drugs and weapons trafic across the Sahel and Sub-Saharan Africa, but the colonel charged with the investigation was assassinated just a week before Boudiaf.[1]
The Attack
[edit]The attack began with a grenade explosion on one side of the podium from where Boudiaf was giving his speech, which attracted the attention of Boudiaf and his bodyguards while another grenade was thrown under his chair. The two blasts were followed by a gunman dressed in the uniform of the elite police intervention unit who emerged from behind Boudiaf, and emptied his sub-machine gun into the President's back. The gunman and at least 40 other people were killed or injured in the attack. Among the wounded were the Minister of Industry and a top provincial official[4].
Television sensorship
[edit]It is now clear that the televised tape of Boudiaf's kill were censored by the authorities. Eyewitnesses claimed that four television cameras filmed the crime scene. A source close to the ENTV has confirmed to the Independent that the video shown on television around the world, in which Boudiaf could be seen saying his last words: and the Islam religion.. and then lying dead on the ground with blood on his chest, was censored:
"The cameras filmed the actual moment of the killing and they censored the scene when the bullets hit Boudiaf. The tape showed his brain exploding when the bullets hit him in the head. There is another tape which shows the arrest of Boumaarafi. In this, Boumaarafi says on camera: 'I killed Boudiaf knowing of his heroic past and that he was a good man. But he didn't do enough against the mafia. And he opposed the choice of the people. I belong to no political party but I belong to the Islamic movement.'[1] 'Boumaarafi was so self-confident, so sure of himself - he spoke so well and was so charismatic - that the authorities feared he would become a hero if the tape was shown on television.' [1]
Boumaarafi is thus now incarcerated in the civilian prison at Annaba, and local journalists have been able to discover little about his family or background. He was 26 years old and, so it is rumoured, used to be an official bodyguard the late president Chadli Bendjedid. The Independent has been told that Boumaarafi was trained for his job in the presidential security unit by the Italian carabinieri.
International circumstances
[edit]Boudiaf's assassination coincided with the Algerian state-owned oil company Sonatrach's launch in London of a first onshore leasing round in which it sought participation by foreign oil companies in opening up new production facilities in Algeria. Oil prices rose on immediate fears that the killing of Boudiaf might trigger unrest that could hit production, but they fell back later in the day. Sources believe there may be a short-term disruption of exports from Algeria, but the country will have to sell oil eventually.
Iran and other members of fundamentalist muslim governments praised the killing of the Algerian leader, while the U.S., the organization of African Unity, France and other western nations condemned it. French leaders in particular voiced fears of civil war or a full military takeover of the former French colony.
The attack on Boudiaf was the Arab World's most dramatic political killing since Egyptian president Anwar Sadat was assassinated by Moslem fundamentalists in 1981.[5][6]