Krim Belkacem
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Arabic. (June 2024) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2013) |
Krim Belkacem | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | October 18, 1970 | (aged 48)
Nationality | Algerian |
Other names | Si Rabah |
Known for | Algerian War, Évian Accords |
Signature | |
Krim Belkacem (Arabic: عبد الكريم بلقاسم or كريم بلقاسم) (September 14, 1922 – October 18, 1970) was an Algerian revolutionary and politician who was a notable figure during the Algerian War. As vice-president of the GPRA, he was the sole signatory of the Évian Accords on the Algerian side. After the 1965 coup d'état, he went into exile and was assassinated in Germany in 1970.
Biography
[edit]Krim was born in the village of Aït Yahia Moussa (now in Tizi Ouzou Province) in the Kabylie region of Algeria. During the Second World War, he joined the French Army, and was promoted corporal in the First Algerian Sharpshooter Regiment, reputedly becoming an excellent shot.[1] Demobilized on October 4, 1945, he returned to his home village, where he took up a bureaucratic post. Krim joined the underground Algerian People's Party at the beginning of 1946, setting up clandestine cells in 12 villages around Draa el-Mizan.[1] Accused of the murder of a forest warden in 1947, he was hunted and he joined the maquis under the Pseudonym of Si Rabah with Moh Nachid, Mohand Talah and Messaoud Ben Arab. Twice sentenced to death by French tribunals in 1947 and 1950, he became the Kabylie responsible of the PPA-MTLD paramilitary organization founded in February 1947 by Messali Hadj, the Organisation spéciale, at the head of 22 members of the resistance (maquisards).
During the Algerian War of Independence, Krim was chief of the FLN's 3rd Wilaya, Kabylie and its surrounding area. After his important role at the Soummam Congress—in which the FLN formalized its revolutionary program—Krim became one of the most important and powerful of all the FLN chiefs.[2] He was the first to be Minister of Defense, then Foreign Minister, in the provisional Government of the Algerian republic (GPRA) in 1958, and Vice President of Algeria.[3] Later he was the principal Algerian negotiator of the agreements of Évian in March 1962. Belkacem was in opposition to the creation of the Political Bureau of the FLN in July 1962 by Ahmed Ben Bella, Houari Boumédiène, and Mohamed Khider.
Political views and assassination
[edit]After the coup d'état of June 19, 1965, he returned to the opposition. Accused of having organized an attack against Boumediene in April 1967, manipulated and betrayed by part of his entourage, he was sentenced to death in absentia.
According to his daughter Karima, in an interview with El Moudjahid on March 25, 1998, Belkacem definitively gave up politics and went into exile in August 1967: "On August 4, 1967," she says, "he and the family hastily packed some effects into the family Volkswagen and drove all night to Morocco. The next day, he was sentenced in absentia." On October 17, 1967, he created with friends including Slimane Amirat, Colonels Amar Ouamrane and Mohand Oulhadj, the Movement for the Defense of the Algerian Revolution (MDRA), an underground party intended to fight against the Boumediene regime.
Two years later, on October 18, 1970, he was found strangled with his tie in a room at the Inter-Continental Hotel in Frankfurt, presumably by Algerian military security agents.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Cheurfi, Achour, La Classe Politique Algerienne, Casbah Editions, Alger, 2006 - p 230
- ^ Cheurfi, Achour, La Classe Politique Algerienne, Casbah Editions, Alger, 2006 - p 231
- ^ Ottaway, Professor Marina; Ottaway, David; Ottaway, Marina (December 15, 1970). "Algeria: The Politics of a Socialist Revolution". University of California Press – via Google Books.
- ^ Martin Evans; John Phillips (1 January 2007). Algeria: Anger of the Dispossessed. Yale University Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-300-10881-1.
- 1922 births
- 1970 deaths
- People from Aït Yahia Moussa
- Kabyle people
- Algerian People's Party politicians
- Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties politicians
- Members of the National Liberation Front (Algeria)
- Assassinated Algerian politicians
- People sentenced to death in absentia
- French Army personnel of World War II
- Vice presidents of Algeria
- Algerian people murdered abroad
- People murdered in Germany
- Foreign ministers of Algeria
- Defense ministers of Algeria
- Algerian Berber politicians
- 20th-century Algerian politicians
- African politicians assassinated in the 1970s
- Politicians assassinated in 1970